key question
Paul Richard Ramer
free10pro at gmail.com
Mon Mar 15 09:28:16 CET 2010
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On Mon, 8 Mar 2010 18:31:41 +0000 MFPA wrote:
>> I am also assuming that the user has intelligence and judgment.
>
> A useful combination, sadly not common enough (-;
Better than useful, it is essential. :-)
>> I mean that he must be able to realize that he needs to be competent
>> in the tool that he is using. How could a person of judgment believe
>> that he could have the minimum knowledge of how to use cryptography
>> and his OpenPGP tool, and believe that he will successfully protect
>> his privacy?
>
> Even intelligence and judgment together do not necessarily lead to
> perfect decisions. The point when the user *thinks* he has sufficient
> knowledge or competence does not automatically coincide with the point
> at which this is true.
Good judgment will lead to good decisions.
>> I have been naive before. But I didn't begin using GnuPGP while I was
>> still naive about it. I studied how cryptography and OpenPGP worked,
>> how to use gpg, and how to use it with e-mail and files.
>
> Many people are less patient than you must be; I have heard numerous
> people advocate the "ready, fire,aim" approach to life.
The "ready, fire, aim" approach leads to missed targets and the death or
injury of bystanders. Uh . . . metaphorically speaking, of course.
>> That is what I was saying in the previous posting. Someone who desires
>> privacy will do what it takes to get it. That includes dispelling his
>> naivety with knowledge.
>
> Which is an ongoing process. An individual desirous of privacy is
> likely to continue finding new threats and/or new protections for as
> long as they care to keep looking.
Knowledge is the first step to wisdom. You can have knowledge without
wisdom, but you cannot have wisdom without knowledge.
>> As for the person not realizing how easy it would be to accidentally
>> upload a public key to a keyserver, I was never that naive. I was aware
>> of it from the beginning. My key wasn't on the keyservers, initially (I
>> chose to upload it later). But I knew that if I was careless it could
>> wind up there.
>
> Were you aware because of something you read, or because of
> experimentation?
Neither; I deduced it. Also no one told me about traffic analysis, but
I deduced it and later read about it.
- -Paul
- --
Lex Luthor: Miss Teschmacher, people can read _War and Peace_ and
think it's a simple adventure story. Others read a
gum wrapper and unlock secrets of the universe.
Miss Teschmacher: Lex, what has chewing gum got to do with secrets of
the universe?
Lex Luthor: Right. Right, Miss Teschmacher.
--From the movie _Superman_
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