On 1/28/06, Steven Pierce <steven.pierce@xxxxxxxxx
> wrote:
OK.. I have done the part that generates the key. I was following the part of sending
the key to the key server. Using this command (web site instruction)
gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --send-keys GPGKEYID
The error that I got was: gpg: "GPGKEYID" not a key ID: skipping.
What did I do wrong??
Steven
On 1/28/06, Tommy Reynolds <Tommy.Reynolds@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:Uttered Steven Pierce <steven.pierce@xxxxxxxxx>, spake thus:
> Question, since I have never done a GPG code before what kind of pharse
> should I use?? Can it be something like "my wifes name is Erin?" Or does it
> need to be something more, like:
> "I live in Orange County calif and I am expecting my first child in Sept"
> Thank you for any that can be provided.
Either. "baloney baffles brains" makes a good one, too. Or a couple
of words with unexpected punctuation "star!lite". Or an intentional
mispelling like "red haytte".
With a random key with at least 36^N-1 choices for an N-character
passphrase, almost anything more than a simple dictionary word is
peachy keen.
HTH
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