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Re: [Mutt] #2992: Re: wish: enable encrytion to arbitrary number of



#2992: Re: wish: enable encrytion to arbitrary number of keys (was: Re:

Comment (by Mutt):

 {{{
 #2992: Re: wish: enable encrytion to arbitrary number of keys (was: Re:

 Comment (by Mutt):

  {{{
  #2992: Re: wish: enable encrytion to arbitrary number of keys (was: Re:

  Comment (by Mutt):

   {{{
   #2992: Re: wish: enable encrytion to arbitrary number of keys (was: Re:

   Comment (by Mutt):

    {{{
    #2992: Re: wish: enable encrytion to arbitrary number of keys (was: Re:

    Changes (by brendan):

      * priority:  major => minor
      * type:  defect => enhancement
      * component:  mutt => crypto
      * milestone:  => 2.0

    Old description:

    > {{{
    > On Fri, Nov 23, 2007 at 03:34:54AM -0500, Derek Martin wrote:
    >
    > > While I don't really oppose this, it seems to me that the far saner
    > > way to deal with this is for the mailing list software to allow the
    > > subscribing users to upload their public key, and to make the
  mailing
    >
    > It would make it easier in some cases, but you do lose security -
    anybody
    > who can somehow get themselves onto the list can read it, and anybody
    > compromising the mailing list host automatically gets to read
    everything.
    > If
    > the senders do the encryption, that doesn't happen.
    >
    > Whether most people need that level of security is another question,
   but
    > then again most people don't use encrypted mailing lists at all...
 :-)
    > }}}

    New description:

     On Fri, Nov 23, 2007 at 03:34:54AM -0500, Derek Martin wrote:

     > While I don't really oppose this, it seems to me that the far saner
     > way to deal with this is for the mailing list software to allow the
     > subscribing users to upload their public key, and to make the
 mailing

     It would make it easier in some cases, but you do lose security -
   anybody
     who can somehow get themselves onto the list can read it, and anybody
     compromising the mailing list host automatically gets to read
   everything.
     If
     the senders do the encryption, that doesn't happen.

     Whether most people need that level of security is another question,
  but
     then again most people don't use encrypted mailing lists at all... :-)
    }}}
   }}}
  }}}
 }}}

-- 
Ticket URL: <http://dev.mutt.org/trac/ticket/2992#comment:>