From: Peter Kretzman <peter.kretzman@mccaw.com>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 9b0a1605b4150bb7a3ed7d675fbf2317515da49019355fe276160a5a02915a30
Message ID: <9402260002.AA04693@axys69.nwest.mccaw.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1994-02-26 00:03:03 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 25 Feb 94 16:03:03 PST
From: Peter Kretzman <peter.kretzman@mccaw.com>
Date: Fri, 25 Feb 94 16:03:03 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Use of PGP---statistics from the public key servers
Message-ID: <9402260002.AA04693@axys69.nwest.mccaw.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
The following table shows the frequency breakdown, by key generation
month, just over the past year, of the approx. 3300 public keys that
are available on the public key servers (I used the one at
<public-key-server@martigny.ai.mit.edu>). Note that I've included
revoked keys, but there are only 19 of these from the same time
period.
In other words, of the keys out there, 211 of them were generated in
March of 1993, 216 in April, etc.
I have no idea if these numbers correlate well to actual PGP use
(these are, after all, just the people who are activist enough to
post their key on the public key server, which also requires some
degree of Internet connectivity). If the numbers DO correlate to
some degree, I thought it was interesting that they appear to show a
recent decline in usage rather than a steady ramp-up. Is the trend
toward universal crypto slacking off?
Keys
Month Generated
------ ---------
03/93 211
04/93 216
05/93 205
06/93 169
07/93 167
08/93 169
09/93 206
10/93 287
11/93 225
12/93 207
01/94 148
02/94 118 (through 2/24/94)
---
Peter Kretzman
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