GPG -- what I do
We've had a lot of discussion about #GPG over the last few days and the first thing I want to say is "Don't sign anything until you've read this". The second thing to say is that these are my thoughts on how GPG works for me, this is not the official 'line'.


It's all about trust and build a web of that trust. But I think we have to be really careful about what we mean about the word trust here. Is it "I trust $person with my kids, to water my plants, look after my vinyl collection &/or my personal data", or it "I trust $person is who they say they are". Sorry for the leading question, but I think it needs stating.


So I have no GPG data on Thomas who runs #KakSte for example, but I trust him with my data. There are others who I have had extensive, wide-ranging and meaningful conversations with and won't sign their GPG keys. Why?


Whenever I get new GPG in... show more
29 comments show more
1 year ago

Still doesn't work. That's the trouble. Once a signature is on the server, you can't make it disappear. Publishing doesn't overwrite. It's a flaw in the system. You can do a few other stupid things to people keys, too. These don't effect functionality, but can confuse other users.

I've got two passports (dual nationality) and three ID cards (from each stage of nationalisation).

Even authoritarian identification is flawed. True, both passports are valid, but you can't see the times I've overstayed visas with one of them on the other. Two of the ID cards are in date, but no longer valid. I've used them (albeit mostly accidentally) without anybody noticing too.

The point is no form of identification is fool proof, even those heavy handed and authoritarian. GPG is just a tool. Yes, ideally we should be quite strict with it (though honestly, I only use it at all when geeks ask me to - it just scares normals), but it's just one piece of evidence to verify an identity.

As has been pointed out, you still need to do your own research before you sign one yourself, and you should do the same research before trusting anyone else's signings.

IMO, the first definition of trust is more important to me than a GPG key ever will be, and you earn that slowly but surely one word at a time, over several years. By the time I'm tel... show more
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