Tommy, On the page, http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/DocsProject/NewWriters it states that "1. You should have a GPG key, and are encouraged to use it to sign your e-mails. This enables everyone to guarantee the authenticity of the e-mails that are sent. A GPG key is also a requirement for gaining access to the CVS system where documents are maintained. See DocsProject/UsingGpg/CreatingKeys for help and instructions if you don't already have a GPG key." so I set up GnuPG. I am glad I did as it taught me something new about Fedora and I now use it to sign my emails and use KGpg to manage them. :) Perhaps that is a little much to just join the email list and correspond but it was a good learning experience. Maybe we could streamline the join procedures for the Documentation Project by taking that requirement out? Or maybe we need more than just Writers and Editors? Any thoughts? Mahalo, Edward On Thu, 2006-03-30 at 22:15 -0600, Tommy Reynolds wrote: > Uttered Edward Haddock <edward.haddock@xxxxxxxxxxx>, spake thus: > > > It was especially difficult for me to > > get Thunderbird setup correctly so I switched over to Evolution as it > > was easier to setup GnuPG to work with it. > > Edward, you may be working too hard ;-) > > Why struggle with GPG for the emails? What suggests that you need to > sign your emails with GPG? > > AFAICT, the GPG is only used to grant CVS access privileges. > > -- > > fedora-docs-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-docs-list
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