Karl Larsen wrote:
Well I used the manual way to send the key out and that went just now and wrote:Paul W. Frields wrote: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.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.Karl
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