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this post was submitted on 11 Feb 2024
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I just mentioned this in another comment tonight; cryptographic verification has existed for years but basically no one has adopted it for anything. Some people still seem to think pasting an image of your handwriting on a document is "signing" a document somehow.
It doesn't help that in a lot of cases, this is actually accepted by a shit ton of important institutions that should be better, but aren't.
Still trying to get people to sign their emails lol
I mean, part of it is PGP is the exact opposite of streamlined and you've got to be NSA levels of paranoid to bother with it.
It's automated in all mainstream email clients, you don't even have to think about it if a contact has it set up
Well, there's your problem.
The most commonly-used mail client in the world is the Gmail web client which does not support it. Uploading your PGP key to Gmail and having them store it server-side for use in a webmail client is obviously problematic from a security standpoint. Number 2 I would guess is Outlook, which appears also not to support it. For most people, I don't think they understand the value of cryptographically signing emails and going through the hassle of generating and publishing their PGP keys, especially since Windows has no built-in easy application for generating and managing such keys.
There's also the case that for most people, signing their emails provides absolutely no immediate benefit to them.
Plus that's email. What about... Literally everything else?
Yeah, almost nothing has good PGP integration.
Except Git, apparently.