delop...@gmail.com [2018-09-30 19:39:03+02] wrote: > Teemu Likonen wrote: >> No. To encrypt you need recipients' public keys which have an encryption >> capability [E]. Usually there is an encryption subkey. To decrypt you >> need the secret key which is associated with the public [E] key that was >> used to encrypt. > > Here is something I do not get - to encrypt I am asked for password - > I guess it is for my secret key, no?
Encryption requires recipient's public [E] key only. It seems that, in addition to encrypting, you are also signing the message. For that you need a secret (sub)key that has signing capability [S]. -- /// Teemu Likonen - .-.. <https://keybase.io/tlikonen> // // PGP: 4E10 55DC 84E9 DFF6 13D7 8557 719D 69D3 2453 9450 ///
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