Red Hat DIRECTORY SERVER 8.1 - 11-01-2010 Manual de usuario Pagina 51

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Just click on Import and Enigmail will do that for you. The imported key will be
added to your keyring.
More often, you will receive someone's public key as an ASC file attached to the
email message. In this case, importing the public key is just as easy: you only
have to right-click on the attachment and choose Import OpenPGP Key.
Someone might also send you his public key embedded in the message text.
If you want to do some signature (and encryption) tests, then you'll find a very
patient correspondent in Adele, “The Friendly OpenPGP Email Robot”. Adele
can be contacted at [email protected] and is an automated program that
is able to receive and understand OpenPGP messages, and to reply to them
accordingly in a very short time.
I sent a simple cleartext mail (unsigned, unencrypted) to Adele, and here's how
she replied to it:
Here Adele complains that there was no public key attached to my message, so
she doesn't know what to do with it. However, she provided me with her public
key embedded in the message: note the OpenPGP block in the mail body, and
the yellow OpenPGP status bar. Clicking on the Decrypt button, and then
confirming, will import the public key into my public keyring:
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