Karl Larsen wrote:
Paul W. Frields wrote:
> On Sun, 2007-12-23 at 08:50 -0700, Karl Larsen wrote:
>
>> WOW! I do not know how to test it guys but I made [B6262B7E] with
>> Seahorse and followed exactly the instructions to send it to MIT. It
>> looks like it didn't work.
>>
>> I will start again with a new key and make dam sure it gets to MIT.
>> This key business is a lot of trouble for a tiny payback.
>>
>
> I beg to differ, the payback is HUGE. I've been working with the Fedora
> Project for over four years now, and it is one of the most rewarding
> parts of my life. I've been part of a worldwide movement that continues
> to change the nature of the global information economy; I've learned a
> huge number of new skills, maybe some better than others; I've helped
> seed work (in some very tiny way, surely) to put technology in the hands
> of children in developing nations, and I've met many fantastic and
> brilliant people while doing it.
>
>
I am on the web at
http://gpgMIT.com and it is broken at 10 AM
Sunday December 23 2007. It will not accept FE2353A7 or 0xFE2353A7 or
anything so I can't join now. I will try again later today but Monday
may be the soonest I can get my new key to them. This is a big problem
if you need to do it, and a bigger problem if you thought you did but
you didn't. The web page is good because when it says it did you can
see if that is so.
Karl
Well I used the manual way to send the key out and that went just
now and wrote:
gpg: sending key FE2353A7 to hkp server
subkeys.pgp.net
I will check and see if MIT has it yet.
Well MIT has not got it so still dead in the water...how do you check
for a key using gpg or seahorse?
--
Karl F. Larsen, AKA K5DI
Linux User
#450462
http://counter.li.org.
PGP 7025 BB6C 7CC3 CFE7 43B2 1574 3279 EBB0 B626 2B7E