What the heck does this mean?? - PGP
This is a discussion on What the heck does this mean?? - PGP ; Old Signed: 04/12/06 at 17:07:21, Decrypted
old signed????????...
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What the heck does this mean??
Old Signed: 04/12/06 at 17:07:21, Decrypted
old signed????????
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Re: What the heck does this mean??
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: RIPEMD160
Dirty Harry wrote in
news:0u7r32p531opge959vi9vtlur4th91pbr4@4ax.com:
> Old Signed: 04/12/06 at 17:07:21, Decrypted
>
>
> old signed????????
When you receive a signed email, the PGP 9.x email proxy will by default
indicate that the received email was signed. If you then send that on to
someone else, such as when including the original text in your reply, the
email proxy will change the notation to this, so that the receiver of the
email will not mistake it for a current signature.
If you attempt to forge a signature to someone using PGP 9.x by including
the Signed notation on your outgoing email, the receiving email proxy will
change the notation to this; to indicate that the received email did not
have a true/valid signature on this receipt.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: PGP Desktop 9.0.6 (Build 6060)
Comment: My PGP FAQ: http://www.mccune.cc/PGP.htm
iQEVAwUBRD20PWDeI9apM77TAQO7Rwf+PkRm2EAG78Gb3/03hHPWFhZHGO0ZC11Q
rTsuRkcrMJJEBhkUCNpoZHC1t6Sm34Vq3dkQ17ZfU/AOXqXz+kDNDafoZp4+Zt3+
J0/c+fg04Lkw2jRDb95zGO6OB0XTmN2WKEyuBz3HmLzOjl+OqcANN p3v5UD/r1hh
TLMVkVaH/Em+oAX2jF8LX6XHmza1xI6335A4OaXP8lv1JV1L60YE9/UXIwmoGvMt
BADUWk13A8pc4ItUpQwHPlSVNNmgHIRnmH42rp3rUNlsyDjSmw CLBSeNCrd+BaZ8
e53DtebPkmY8RSeWFigCjjZGu5jQcSPnBOGprA++RUvRLdhGiM s1Ig==
=j1mS
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
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Re: What the heck does this mean??
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1
>> Old Signed: 04/12/06 at 17:07:21, Decrypted
>>
>>
>> old signed????????
>
>When you receive a signed email, the PGP 9.x email proxy will by default
>indicate that the received email was signed. If you then send that on to
>someone else, such as when including the original text in your reply, the
>email proxy will change the notation to this, so that the receiver of the
>email will not mistake it for a current signature.
>
>If you attempt to forge a signature to someone using PGP 9.x by including
>the Signed notation on your outgoing email, the receiving email proxy will
>change the notation to this; to indicate that the received email did not
>have a true/valid signature on this receipt.
Thanks once again oh PGP guru.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: PGP Desktop 9.0.5 (Build 5050)
iQA/AwUBRD+LW6q48iFKbem4EQJDbwCg6zCLLbWxe2F2HNpDMIhrjW kUDAEAn22s
2/FcfWDSCfgqp/yDC4PDu9zi
=d7SL
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Dirty Harry