G10: The Free PGP Replacement

Werner Koch wk@isil.d.shuttle.de
Mon, 22 Dec 1997 19:41:25 +0100


Ian Brown <I.Brown@cs.ucl.ac.uk> writes:


> Werner, I presume you are writing your version in C. If you and Lutz
> were able to merge your two versions, and had support for ALL the
> cryptosystems mentioned in the OpenPGP draft, the result would be
I guess I should talk to Lutz. For now it=B4s mainly 2.6 compatible (RFC1991) because I noticed OpenPGP too late. I use these one-pass packets, because they are a good idea. The other stuff is a little bit weird: * Why do they reuse existing (RFC1991) packets (comment), where there are a lot of new packet numbers available.=20 * I don't think the new length headers make any sense; much to complicat= ed. I use simple 2 byte length headers when I have to process data from a pipe and set the length bits of the CTB to 0 (conflicts with compressed packets; may need the help of a marker packet or something to enable this new encoding). The advantage of this method is, that it can be handled o= n a very low level (write the length header just the buffer is flushed) because it can be any abitrary positive value.
> In other fora, most of the people on this list have been getting
> increasingly pissed off with PGP Inc. This could be the start of a real
> alternative to the GAKware Network Associates seem determined to pump
I noticed that there is not much traffic on the open-pgp list anymore; will there be a new draft available or was this OpenPGP mainly driven by PGP Inc and now canceled? --=20 Werner Koch, Duesseldorf - werner.koch@guug.de - PGP keyID: 0C9857A= 5