Have you got a small file called signature.asc attached to an email from me? That is a file which contains a cryptographic signature for the email.
By using the information in the file, you can verify that I actually wrote the email, using my public key (see bottom of this page).
To do so, you may use an application like GnuPG and Enigmail.
Have you received an email from me that resembles this one?
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Hi! This is a phony message. paul -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.2.2 (GNU/Linux) BQ3FEMBdf02JL145sWMIwCgkfjkjdf87ssEGUK 2ESTB2W/Z01Nu9+ziyM= =gqDi -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Then you can verify that I actually wrote the email, using my public key (see bottom of this page).
To do so, you may use an application like GnuPG and enigmail.
If you want to send me an encrypted message, your can use my public key (see bottom of this page).
To do so, you may use an application like GnuPG and enigmail.
Another possibility is to write the email in a file, encrypt the file and send it as an ordinary attachment.
This file contains the
public key for the email adress on paulsundvall.net. File checksum:
md5=538270252266c46005861f8c0dcd672b
Key Fingerprint:
0C9B 0CBB 217E DC0F 716F 6E67 2702 8C26 88F2 4178