Export secret key from WinXP (GnuPG) 1.4.7 to AIX PGP Version 6.5.8 gives Bad Pass Phrase
Robert J. Hansen
rjh at sixdemonbag.org
Wed Sep 17 19:08:40 CEST 2008
rlively wrote:
> I need help reconciling the two responses below.
Sure. Both answers are correct; it's a matter of how David and I are
interpreting your question.
>> Even though they key specifies Cipher: IDEA, are you saying that we
>> should be able to encrypt to this public key just fine with the
>> latest veresion of GnuPG, unless that contact is stuck using legacy
>> PGP 2.x?
>>
>> If they use a newer version of PGP or GnuPG we should be fine?
>
> David Shaw wrote:
>
> Yes. Even though the key specifies IDEA as a cipher, modern OpenPGP
> systems (GPG or PGP) will both use 3DES as an alternative if they do
> not have IDEA.
David is talking about using classic PGP 2.6-style ClassicPGP keys to
encrypt OpenPGP traffic. This answer is correct. You can use
ClassicPGP keys in an OpenPGP environment if both parties are using a
newer version of GnuPG/PGP.
> He is not. There are two different internet standards for PGP. The
> first one, called RFC1991, dates to the early '90s. The second one,
> called RFC4880, was only officially released a few months ago. The
> two standards are not interchangeable, and RFC4880 brings many more
> capabilities to the table.
>
> GnuPG is an RFC4880 application. PGP 2.6 is RFC1991. The two are
> generally incompatible.
I'm talking about using classic PGP 2.6-style ClassicPGP keys to encrypt
ClassicPGP traffic. AFAIK, this answer is correct; GnuPG was never
meant to be a conformant ClassicPGP application. (It's possible that
things have changed in the GnuPG codebase since the last time I looked
at this, though.)
The short version is that David read your message as "can GnuPG be used
to process OpenPGP traffic while using ClassicPGP keys", and I read it
as "can GnuPG be used to process ClassicPGP traffic, using ClassicPGP keys".
More information about the Gnupg-users
mailing list