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- The GNU Privacy Guard
GnuPG, also known as GPG, is a command line tool with features for easy integration with other applications A wealth of frontend applications and libraries are available GnuPG also provides support for S MIME and Secure Shell (ssh)
- GnuPG - Support - GNU Privacy Guard
GnuPG is a free implementation of OpenPGP HOWTOs Includes links to some HOWTOs available in several languages to get out the best from GnuPG
- GnuPG - GnuPG wiki - GNU Privacy Guard
It integrates with other applications A number of frontend applications and libraries are available The main command line interfaces are gpg and gpgsm Standards GnuPG is a complete and Free Software implementation of the OpenPGP standard as defined by RFC4880 (also known as PGP)
- GnuPG - gpg man page - GNU Privacy Guard
gpg-connect-agent(1) Access the background processes watchgnupg(1) Watch debug output gpg-check-pattern(1) Helper to check passwords
- Operational GPG Commands (Using the GNU Privacy Guard)
gpg caches the passphrase used for symmetric encryption so that a decrypt operation may not require that the user needs to enter the passphrase The option --no-symkey-cache can be used to disable this feature
- GnuPG - User guides - GNU Privacy Guard
A Practical Introduction to GPG in Windows This guide, written by Brendan Kidwell, shows you how to use the free public key cryptography system GnuPG from a Windows user perspective It started life as an outline for a talk Brendan was going to give in his Cryptology class, but it quickly grew into a document that stands on its own
- GPG (1) - gnupg. org
gpg is the OpenPGP part of the GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG) It is a tool to provide digital encryption and signing services using the OpenPGP standard gpg features complete key management and all the bells and whistles you would expect from a full OpenPGP implementation There are two main versions of GnuPG: GnuPG 1 x and GnuPG 2 x
- Encrypting and decrypting documents - GNU Privacy Guard
alice% gpg --output doc gpg --encrypt --recipient blake@cyb org doc The --recipient option is used once for each recipient and takes an extra argument specifying the public key to which the document should be encrypted
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