[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: the revocation blues
peter honeyman <[email protected]>
>this certainly presents a challenge for the trust web.
>i suppose the key ring needs a "kill" list.
From: [email protected] (John A. Perry)
>Several of us have been wrestling with a key revocation
>problem for some time now.
>Several
>hours later, I was still playing with PGP and suffered a disk crash. I
>had not yet had a chance to back up my keyring. Needless to say, I
>lost the keyring and now I have no way to revoke the key.
I don't get it. The point of revocation is to remove a *compromised*
key, one that someone has potentially copied, etc. If there is no
chance that the key can be accessed, how is this a problem? I guess the
problem is that only one key can be associated with one person
(identity) per keyring? Then I would say the thing to do is propagate
the new key through the trust network in the same way it was originally
established...? This isn't really a deficiency in the software, is it?