1996-03-14 - Re: PGP reveals the key ID of the recipient of encrypted msg

Header Data

From: “Robert A. Rosenberg” <hal9001@panix.com>
To: matthew@itconsult.co.uk (Matthew Richardson)
Message Hash: 0bc0ae163a983645fa2889dba36ce9e8565746dd00cce8783535596eacba8813
Message ID: <v02140b02ad6cf666a636@[165.254.158.237]>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-03-14 06:53:09 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 14 Mar 1996 14:53:09 +0800

Raw message

From: "Robert A. Rosenberg" <hal9001@panix.com>
Date: Thu, 14 Mar 1996 14:53:09 +0800
To: matthew@itconsult.co.uk (Matthew Richardson)
Subject: Re: PGP reveals  the key ID of the recipient of encrypted msg
Message-ID: <v02140b02ad6cf666a636@[165.254.158.237]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


At 4:12 3/13/96, Matthew Richardson wrote:

>On Wed, 13 Mar 1996 00:28:48 -0500, "Robert A. Rosenberg"
><hal9001@panix.com> wrote:
>
>>There is also the problem of knowing WHICH key to use (ie: Even when you
>>know the message is intended for you, you must do a test run with each of
>>your keys until one works).
>
>I believe that provided all your keys are in your secret keyring, PGP
>will automatically pick the correct one for you.

I know that. The situation was that the hypothetical message format itself
contained NO INDICATION of who is was for or what key was used to encode
it. PGP selects the right key by using the indication that is in the
message of what key is to be used.







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