Subj : Re: Anyone using PGP/GPG in here? To : pixelheresy From : Vk3jed Date : Tue Nov 06 2018 06:41 am -=> On 11-05-18 07:19, pixelheresy wrote to Vk3jed <=- pi> @TZ: 412c pi> Now a days (beyond what may be available in Mystic... I admittedly pi> never made the jump to actually running a board), PGP/GPG encryption in pi> readily available in most computing if you look. Well, in places, but it's around. But that's beyond the scope of this discussion (GPG on BBSs). pi> PGP or GPG tools are available on the OS level for everything and pi> frankly the standard GPG for Mac/Linux on the command-line is quite pi> easy to use once you get the hang of it. As such, any arbitrary text, That's not an option. I have a low tolerance to fiddly operations, even if they are easy. Any solution must be fairly well streamlined. On Thunderbird, Enigmail works well, and fits into the workflow nicely. pi> Beyond that, there are plenty of online mail services that have pi> free-to-cheap mail services with PGP/GPG enabled. I am in the process If you're talking about webmail, forget it. Another non starter for me. Poor performance and navigation plagues a lot of web based services, and as mail is a fairly high volume one for me, that's a big issue. pi> of migrating to Protonmail and had no problem setting up better keys in pi> it than "factory default" (4k hashes rather than 2k hashes). This comes pi> with the security of having two-factor for webmail and a secure mobile pi> client (also, being able to send expiring elliptical cypher messages to pi> any email, even if you don't have or *they* don't have a public key is pi> kind of fun). Also on iOS I recently got PGP Encrypt, which is a pi> keyboard extension, key manager, and arbitrary encryption tool (text <--> GPG). Haven't played with it much, but could be a nice way to do omething pi> quick and dirty in cases where you want to "on-off" pi> a sensitive text message or encrypt the content on a web form... Some interesting stuff there, though sgsin, how useful is it in a BBS context? pi> I remember back in the day, I used to see a lot of people putting keys pi> or links to them in sigs, etc. but now it seems like either email is pi> seen irreverent or people seem secure with Google handling pi> everything... No idea. Yes, it was popular for a while. Dunno. .... Does fuzzy logic tickle? === MultiMail/Win v0.51 --- SBBSecho 3.03-Linux * Origin: Freeway BBS Bendigo,Australia freeway.apana.org.au (21:1/109) .