beginner questions,

Satish Artham satish.artham@screamingsolutions.com
Tue Mar 6 19:46:06 2001


That's exactly what I want.  I'd like to receive an encrypted document via
HTTP, decrypt the document, and be able to verify that the signer of the
document is the same person that sent me the document.


Satish Artham, Co-Op Developer, Screaming Solutions Ventures Inc.
Enhancing Business Relationships through Electronic Markets

Voice: (416) 408-1395, ext. 235 email: satish.artham@ScreamingSolutions.com
Fax:   (416) 408-1396           WWW:             www.ScreamingSolutions.com
Mail:  214 King Street West,  Suite 500   Toronto, Ontario   M5H 3S6


-----Original Message-----
From: Nick Andriash [mailto:andriash@operamail.com]
Sent: Monday, March 05, 2001 2:41 PM
To: gnupg-users@gnupg.org
Subject: Re: beginner questions,


On March 5, 2001, at 10:01:37 AM, Ingo Klöcker Wrote:


>> 2) Is there any way to output the signature as part of the document
>> upon decrypting a signed doc?
IK> Sorry, I don't understand what you want to do. Perhaps he is wanting the verification information included in the original document once the signature has been verified... along the lines of how Eudora and Outlook include it: *** PGP Signature Status: good *** Signer: Ingo Klöcker <ingo.kloecker@epost.de> (Invalid) *** Signed: 05/03/01 10:01:37 AM *** Verified: 05/03/01 11:39:47 AM *** BEGIN PGP VERIFIED MESSAGE *** Nick -=N.J. Andriash | Vancouver, B.C. Canada=- [ TB! v1.51b1 | Win 98 SE 4.10 2222 A ] [ GnuPG v1.0.4-1 (MingW32) | Key ID: 0x7BA3FDCE ] __________________________________________________ _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users