[7762] in cryptography@c2.net mail archive
Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers, and the Web of Trust
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Ted Lemon)
Wed Sep 6 10:26:12 2000
Message-Id: <200009060538.e865cgC01644@grosse.bisbee.fugue.com>
To: Ray Dillinger <bear@sonic.net>
Cc: David Honig <honig@sprynet.com>, "P.J. Ponder" <ponder@freenet.tlh.fl.us>,
Dan Geer <geer@world.std.com>, cryptography@c2.net
In-Reply-To: Message from Ray Dillinger <bear@sonic.net>
of "Tue, 05 Sep 2000 21:22:55 MST." <Pine.LNX.4.21.0009052059020.25447-100000@bolt.sonic.net>
Date: Tue, 05 Sep 2000 22:38:42 -0700
From: Ted Lemon <mellon@nominum.com>
If you sign the revocation certificate in the compromised key, then
the only way it can get revoked is if the owner of the key revokes it
or it's been compromised...
_MelloN_