Comment by jrockway 13 years ago People send important email without encryption and digital signatures? 5 comments jrockway Reply hollerith 13 years ago I notice that your HN profile and your personal home page give an email address, but no public key. jrockway 13 years ago On the other hand, a quick search on the MIT keyserver reveals:http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=vindex&search=0xD... anigbrowl 13 years ago ...which 99% of the internet have never heard of. I was using PGP in 1992 and I had either forgotten or never known there was a public keyserver at MIT. 2 replies →
hollerith 13 years ago I notice that your HN profile and your personal home page give an email address, but no public key. jrockway 13 years ago On the other hand, a quick search on the MIT keyserver reveals:http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=vindex&search=0xD... anigbrowl 13 years ago ...which 99% of the internet have never heard of. I was using PGP in 1992 and I had either forgotten or never known there was a public keyserver at MIT. 2 replies →
jrockway 13 years ago On the other hand, a quick search on the MIT keyserver reveals:http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=vindex&search=0xD... anigbrowl 13 years ago ...which 99% of the internet have never heard of. I was using PGP in 1992 and I had either forgotten or never known there was a public keyserver at MIT. 2 replies →
anigbrowl 13 years ago ...which 99% of the internet have never heard of. I was using PGP in 1992 and I had either forgotten or never known there was a public keyserver at MIT. 2 replies →
I notice that your HN profile and your personal home page give an email address, but no public key.
On the other hand, a quick search on the MIT keyserver reveals:
http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=vindex&search=0xD...
...which 99% of the internet have never heard of. I was using PGP in 1992 and I had either forgotten or never known there was a public keyserver at MIT.
2 replies →