<html><head></head><body>As long as you did not publish reports revocation, delete the key and re-import it without the revocation cert. <br><br><div class="gmail_quote">Am 3. September 2018 17:03:19 MESZ schrieb "Roland Siemons (P)" <Siemons@CleanFuels.nl>:<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); padding-left: 1ex;">
<pre class="k9mail">Dear GnuPG,<br><br>I am already using GnuPG for a long time. But try to improve my<br>understanding of and working with it.<br>I became a member of Free Software Foundation Europe, and got a<br>smartcard. I wanted to use it.<br><br>And that is where the trouble started:<br>I intended to copy all my personal keys to the smart card.<br>In Kleopatra, I selected "Tools/Manage smartcards"<br>Then I selected "Import a certificate from a file", and selected files<br>from my laptop.<br>I was under the impression that I was copying files to the smartcard.<br>By doing so, I not only selected my private key but also my revocation<br>key (because, why should I enable a thief of my laptop to revoke my key?).<br>And then it appeared that I had revoked my entire key pair. Unintended!<br>Apparently, under smartcard management, I was not at all copying files<br>to the smartcard. Apparently, I was doing something else. Did I at all<br>copy files to the smartcard?<br><br>Questions:<br>Can I UNrevoke that key?<br>How can I see what is on the smartcard?<br>How can I copy files to the smartcard?<br><br>I studied the GnuPG Smartcard How-To<br>(www.gnupg.org/howtos/card-howto/en/smartcard-howto.html), but that is<br>entirely linux oriented.<br>I am working on a win7 system.<br><br>Can anyone help me further?<br><br>Thanks!<br><br>Roland<br></pre></blockquote></div><br>
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