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vxlabs.com | ||
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ssd.eff.org
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| | | | | NOTE: This guide is not being actively reviewed or updated, and is currently retired. If you would like to use PGP via GnuPG, or Thunderbird with Enigmail, please refer to those services' websites and documentation for information on how to install and use them. To use PGP to exchange secure emails you have to bring together three programs: GnuPG, Mozilla Thunderbird and Enigmail. GnuPG is the program that actually encrypts and decrypts the content of your mail, Mozilla Thunderbird is an email client tha... | |
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stafwag.github.io
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| | | | | In previous blog posts, we discussed setting up a GPG smartcard on GNU/Linux and FreeBSD. In this blog post, we will configure Thunderbird to work with an external smartcard reader and our GPG-compatible smartcard. Before Thunderbird 78, if you wanted to use OpenPGP email encryption, you had to use a third-party add-on such as https://enigmail.net/. Thunderbird's recent versions natively support OpenPGP. The Enigmail addon for Thunderbird has been discontinued. See: https://enigmail.net/index.php/en/home/news. I didn't find good documentation on how to set up Thunderbird with a GnuPG smartcard when I moved to a new coreboot laptop, so this was the reason I created this blog post series. | |
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melkat.blog
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| | | | | Anyone can be anyone when it comes to commits. For example, here is a commit where ""Linus Torvalds"" deletes Linux. I put this document together for myself a while back, but I thought I would share it with other people who want a straightforward guide to setting up commit signing with GPG. | |
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www.linux.it
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| | | Here are my notes about copying PGP keys to external hardware devices such as Yubikeys. Let me begin by saying that the gpg tools are pretty bad at this. MAKE A COUPLE ... | ||