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Pretty Good Privacy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pretty Good Privacy ( PGP ) is a computer program that provides cryptographic privacy and authentication. PGP is often used for signing, encrypting and decrypting e-mails to increase the security ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pretty_Good_Privacy |
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GNU Privacy Guard - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Recently someone asked me for a GPG or PGP public key so that they could send some sensitive material to me by email. I understood what they meant, but inwardly I groaned because I've just never had any reason to use public key encryption, and had no idea how to create the key or decrypt what would be sent back to me.
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PGP/GPG are tools for encrypting and signing files and e-mail messages. Encrypting to prevent others for being able to view it, signing so that the receiver can be certain from whom the original file came from and that it did not alter.
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GPG vs. PGP? -- article related to Ask Slashdot and Encryption. ... GPG vs PGP | Log In/Create an Account | Top | 158 comments (Spill at 50!) | Index Only | Search Discussion...
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Hello Newbiewweb, I have used PGP products, and have impliment a corporate solution using the PGP Universal Server, which has many features that GPG does not have (centralized administration, Active DIrectory and LDAP integration, Whole Disk encryption with AD password synchronization etc).
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What are the relative merits and drawbacks of using Gnu Privacy Guard vs. Network Associates' PGP. I am not referring to the fact that GPG doesn't use any restricted implemtations or algorithems;
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