PGP automation

Philip Kizer pckizer at tamu.edu
Fri Oct 29 09:12:46 PDT 1993


-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----

>   In short, I sugest doing what you are thinking about: use two keys,
> a high security key, and a low security key signed by the high one.

[ explaination of method deleted ]

>   That's what I do.
> 
> j'
> --
>                 O I am Jay Prime Positive jpp at markv.com 
> 1250 bit key fingerprint =  B8 95 E0 AF 9A A2 CD A5  89 C9 F0 FE B4 3A 2C 3F
>  524 bit key fingerprint =  8A 7C B9 F2 D5 46 4D ED  66 23 F1 71 DE FF 51 48
> Public keys by `finger jpp at markv.com' or mail to pgp-public-keys at pgp.mit.edu
> Your feedback is welcome, directly or via symbol JPP on hex at sea.east.sun.com


I like this method you mentioned of
using two keys, on one on the public machine, and one more secure at home
or whatever.

I meant to comment on this before...I'm not sure about the "detached"
signature, though.  What if someone created a detached signature, adds it
to their header, and the last thing that happens is that their mailer
appends their .signature to the end of the message.  The only way seems to
be to say, "Encorporate the detached signature mechanism into whatever
program you're using so that it's the last thing that happens.  This
includes things like mailx, elm, and inews."  Not everyone could probably
comply with this (especially some who work for corporations that add a
corporate signature to messages after it's left the user's hands).

- -pc

____________________________________________________________ Philip Kizer ___
Texas A&M CIS Operating Systems Group, Unix      fnord       pckizer at tamu.edu

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: 2.3a

iQCVAgUBLNE/87ZspOMRmJBhAQG1iQP/bAdjFL+OYzYJCNgvjB/0+eW+yA5ym/NY
6JrJkGjOKgjYMJ+fZFItcxgfiRUlFs+1X+N5j51P5r78XOVK20v5La2BP5CftOmj
bLsb8Lg0hjCLtPbZWcywvPjAmA03fp3/gtFGr1rygTWGTy8cUlbRJS6FGcc0/uqZ
o35s9zrul10=
=X9yf
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----





More information about the cypherpunks-legacy mailing list