Annotation of pgp/pgpdoc1.txt, revision 1.1.1.1

1.1       root        1:                     Phil's Pretty Good Software
                      2:                               Presents
                      3: 
                      4:                                 ===
                      5:                                 PGP
                      6:                                 ===
                      7: 
                      8:                         Pretty Good Privacy
                      9:                 Public Key Encryption for the Masses
                     10: 
                     11: 
                     12:                      --------------------------
                     13:                           PGP User's Guide
                     14:                      Volume I: Essential Topics
                     15:                      --------------------------
                     16:                         by Philip Zimmermann
                     17:                           Revised 1 Sep 92
                     18: 
                     19: 
                     20:                      PGP Version 2.0 - 1 Sep 92
                     21:                         Software Written by
                     22:                          Philip Zimmermann
                     23:                                 with
                     24:           Hal Finney, Branko Lankester, and Peter Gutmann
                     25: 
                     26: 
                     27: 
                     28: 
                     29: Synopsis:  PGP uses public-key encryption to protect E-mail and data
                     30: files.  Communicate securely with people you've never met, with no
                     31: secure channels needed for prior exchange of keys.  PGP is well
                     32: featured and fast, with sophisticated key management, digital
                     33: signatures, data compression, and good ergonomic design.
                     34: 
                     35: 
                     36: Software and documentation (c) Copyright 1990-1992 Philip Zimmermann. 
                     37: For information on PGP licensing, distribution, copyrights, patents,
                     38: trademarks, liability limitations, and export controls, see the
                     39: "Legal Issues" section in the "PGP User's Guide, Volume II: Special
                     40: Topics".
                     41: 
                     42: 
                     43: Contents
                     44: ========
                     45: 
                     46: Quick Overview
                     47: Why Do You Need PGP?
                     48: How it Works
                     49: Installing PGP
                     50: How to Use PGP
                     51:   To See a Usage Summary
                     52:   Encrypting a Message
                     53:   Signing a Message
                     54:   Signing and then Encrypting
                     55:   Using Just Conventional Encryption
                     56:   Decrypting and Checking Signatures
                     57:   Managing Keys
                     58:     RSA Key Generation
                     59:     Adding a Key to Your Key Ring
                     60:     Removing a Key from Your Key Ring
                     61:     Extracting (copying) a Key from Your Key Ring
                     62:     Viewing the Contents of Your Key Ring
                     63:     How to Protect Public Keys from Tampering
                     64:     How Does PGP Keep Track of Which Keys are Valid?
                     65:     How to Protect Secret Keys from Disclosure
                     66:     Revoking a Public Key
                     67: Advanced Topics
                     68:   Sending Ciphertext Through E-mail Channels: Radix-64 Format
                     69:   Environmental Variable for Path Name
                     70:   Setting Configuration Parameters: CONFIG.TXT
                     71: Vulnerabilities
                     72: Trusting Snake Oil
                     73: PGP Quick Reference
                     74: Legal Issues
                     75: Acknowledgments
                     76: About the Author
                     77: 
                     78: 
                     79: Quick Overview
                     80: =============
                     81: 
                     82: Pretty Good(tm) Privacy (PGP), from Phil's Pretty Good Software, is a
                     83: high security cryptographic software application for MSDOS, Unix,
                     84: VAX/VMS, and other computers.  PGP allows people to exchange files or
                     85: messages with privacy, authentication, and convenience.  Privacy
                     86: means that only those intended to receive a message can read it. 
                     87: Authentication means that messages that appear to be from a
                     88: particular person can only have originated from that person. 
                     89: Convenience means that privacy and authentication are provided
                     90: without the hassles of managing keys associated with conventional
                     91: cryptographic software.  No secure channels are needed to exchange
                     92: keys between users, which makes PGP much easier to use.  This is
                     93: because PGP is based on a powerful new technology called "public key"
                     94: cryptography.  
                     95: 
                     96: PGP combines the convenience of the Rivest-Shamir-Adleman (RSA)
                     97: public key cryptosystem with the speed of conventional cryptography,
                     98: message digests for digital signatures, data compression before
                     99: encryption, good ergonomic design, and sophisticated key management. 
                    100: And PGP performs the public-key functions faster than most other
                    101: software implementations.  PGP is public key cryptography for the
                    102: masses.
                    103: 
                    104: PGP does not provide any built-in modem communications capability. 
                    105: You must use a separate software product for that.
                    106: 
                    107: This document, "Volume I: Essential Topics", only explains the
                    108: essential concepts for using PGP, and should be read by all PGP
                    109: users.  "Volume II: Special Topics" covers the advanced features of
                    110: PGP and other special topics, and may be read by more serious PGP
                    111: users.  Neither volume explains the underlying technology details of
                    112: cryptographic algorithms and data structures.  
                    113: 
                    114: 
                    115: Why Do You Need PGP?
                    116: ====================
                    117: 
                    118: It's personal.  It's private.  And it's no one's business but yours.
                    119: You may be planning a political campaign, discussing your taxes, or
                    120: having an illicit affair.  Or you may be doing something that you
                    121: feel shouldn't be illegal, but is.  Whatever it is, you don't want
                    122: your private electronic mail (E-mail) or confidential documents read
                    123: by anyone else.  There's nothing wrong with asserting your privacy. 
                    124: Privacy is as apple-pie as the Constitution.  
                    125: 
                    126: Perhaps you think your E-mail is legitimate enough that encryption is
                    127: unwarranted.  If you really are a law-abiding citizen with nothing to
                    128: hide, then why don't you always send your paper mail on postcards? 
                    129: Why not submit to drug testing on demand?  Why require a warrant for
                    130: police searches of your house?  Are you trying to hide something? 
                    131: You must be a subversive or a drug dealer if you hide your mail
                    132: inside envelopes.  Or maybe a paranoid nut.  Do law-abiding citizens
                    133: have any need to encrypt their E-mail?
                    134: 
                    135: What if everyone believed that law-abiding citizens should use
                    136: postcards for their mail?  If some brave soul tried to assert his
                    137: privacy by using an envelope for his mail, it would draw suspicion. 
                    138: Perhaps the authorities would open his mail to see what he's hiding. 
                    139: Fortunately, we don't live in that kind of world, because everyone
                    140: protects most of their mail with envelopes.  So no one draws suspicion
                    141: by asserting their privacy with an envelope.  There's safety in
                    142: numbers.  Analogously, it would be nice if everyone routinely used
                    143: encryption for all their E-mail, innocent or not, so that no one drew
                    144: suspicion by asserting their E-mail privacy with encryption.  Think
                    145: of it as a form of solidarity.
                    146: 
                    147: Today, if the Government wants to violate the privacy of ordinary
                    148: citizens, it has to expend a certain amount of expense and labor to
                    149: intercept and steam open and read paper mail, and listen to and
                    150: possibly transcribe spoken telephone conversation.  This kind of
                    151: labor- intensive monitoring is not practical on a large scale.  This
                    152: is only done in important cases when it seems worthwhile. 
                    153: 
                    154: More and more of our private communications are being routed through
                    155: electronic channels.  Electronic mail will gradually replace
                    156: conventional paper mail.  E-mail messages are just too easy to
                    157: intercept and scan for interesting keywords.  This can be done
                    158: easily, routinely, automatically, and undetectably on a grand scale. 
                    159: International cablegrams are already scanned this way on a large
                    160: scale by the NSA. 
                    161: 
                    162: We are moving toward a future when the nation will be crisscrossed
                    163: with high capacity fiber optic data networks linking together all our
                    164: increasingly ubiquitous personal computers.  E-mail will be the norm
                    165: for everyone, not the novelty it is today.  Perhaps the Government
                    166: will protect our E-mail with Government-designed encryption 
                    167: algorithms.  Probably most people will trust that.  But perhaps some
                    168: people will prefer their own protective measures.
                    169: 
                    170: Senate Bill 266, a 1991 omnibus anti-crime bill, had an unsettling
                    171: measure buried in it.  If this non binding resolution had become real
                    172: law, it would have forced manufacturers of secure communications
                    173: equipment to insert special "trap doors" in their products, so that
                    174: the Government can read anyone's encrypted messages.  It reads:  "It
                    175: is the sense of Congress that providers of electronic communications
                    176: services and manufacturers of electronic communications service
                    177: equipment shall insure that communications systems permit the
                    178: Government to obtain the plain text contents of voice, data, and
                    179: other communications when appropriately authorized by law."  This
                    180: measure was defeated after rigorous protest from civil libertarians
                    181: and industry groups.  But the Government has since introduced other
                    182: legislation to work toward similar objectives.
                    183: 
                    184: If privacy is outlawed, only outlaws will have privacy.  Intelligence
                    185: agencies have access to good cryptographic technology.  So do the big
                    186: arms and drug traffickers.  So do defense contractors, oil companies,
                    187: and other corporate giants.  But ordinary people and grassroots
                    188: political organizations mostly have not had access to affordable
                    189: "military grade" public-key cryptographic technology.  Until now.
                    190: 
                    191: PGP enables people to take their privacy into their own hands.  
                    192: There's a growing social need for it.  That's why I wrote it.
                    193: 
                    194: 
                    195: How it Works
                    196: ============
                    197: 
                    198: It would help if you were already familiar with the concept of
                    199: cryptography in general and public key cryptography in particular. 
                    200: Nonetheless, here are a few introductory remarks about public key
                    201: cryptography.
                    202: 
                    203: First, some terminology.  Suppose I want to send you a message, but I
                    204: don't want anyone but you to be able to read it.  I can "encrypt", or
                    205: "encipher" the message, which means I scramble it up in a hopelessly
                    206: complicated way, rendering it unreadable to anyone except you, the
                    207: intended recipient of the message.  I supply a cryptographic "key" to
                    208: encrypt the message, and you have to use the same key to decipher or
                    209: "decrypt" it.  At least that's how it works in conventional
                    210: "single-key" cryptosystems.
                    211: 
                    212: In conventional cryptosystems, such as the US Federal Data Encryption
                    213: Standard (DES), a single key is used for both encryption and
                    214: decryption.  This means that a key must be initially transmitted via
                    215: secure channels so that both parties can know it before encrypted
                    216: messages can be sent over insecure channels.  This may be
                    217: inconvenient.  If you have a secure channel for exchanging keys, then
                    218: why do you need cryptography in the first place?
                    219: 
                    220: In public key cryptosystems, everyone has two related complementary
                    221: keys, a publicly revealed key and a secret key.  Each key unlocks the
                    222: code that the other key makes.  Knowing the public key does not help
                    223: you deduce the corresponding secret key.  The public key can be
                    224: published and widely disseminated across a communications network.
                    225: This protocol provides privacy without the need for the same kind of
                    226: secure channels that a conventional cryptosystem requires.
                    227: 
                    228: Anyone can use a recipient's public key to encrypt a message to that
                    229: person, and that recipient uses her own corresponding secret key to
                    230: decrypt that message.  No one but the recipient can decrypt it,
                    231: because no one else has access to that secret key.  Not even the
                    232: person who encrypted the message can decrypt it.  
                    233: 
                    234: Message authentication is also provided.  The sender's own secret key
                    235: can be used to encrypt a message, thereby "signing" it.  This creates
                    236: a digital signature of a message, which the recipient (or anyone
                    237: else) can check by using the sender's public key to decrypt it.  This
                    238: proves that the sender was the true originator of the message, and
                    239: that the message has not been subsequently altered by anyone else,
                    240: because the sender alone possesses the secret key that made that
                    241: signature.  Forgery of a signed message is infeasible, and the sender
                    242: cannot later disavow his signature. 
                    243: 
                    244: These two processes can be combined to provide both privacy and
                    245: authentication by first signing a message with your own secret key,
                    246: then encrypting the signed message with the recipient's public key. 
                    247: The recipient reverses these steps by first decrypting the message
                    248: with her own secret key, then checking the enclosed signature with
                    249: your public key.  These steps are done automatically by the
                    250: recipient's software.
                    251: 
                    252: Because the public key encryption algorithm is much slower than
                    253: conventional single-key encryption, encryption is better accomplished
                    254: by using a high-quality fast conventional single-key encryption
                    255: algorithm to encipher the message.  This original unenciphered
                    256: message is called "plaintext".  In a process invisible to the user, a
                    257: temporary random key, created just for this one "session", is used to
                    258: conventionally encipher the plaintext file.  Then the recipient's
                    259: public key is used to encipher this temporary random conventional
                    260: key.  This public-key-enciphered conventional "session" key is sent
                    261: along with the enciphered text (called "ciphertext") to the
                    262: recipient.  The recipient uses her own secret key to recover this
                    263: temporary session key, and then uses that key to run the fast
                    264: conventional single-key algorithm to decipher the large ciphertext 
                    265: message.
                    266: 
                    267: Public keys are kept in individual "key certificates" that include
                    268: the key owner's user ID (which is that person's name), a timestamp of
                    269: when the key pair was generated, and the actual key material.  Public
                    270: key certificates contain the public key material, while secret key
                    271: certificates contain the secret key material.  Each secret key is
                    272: also encrypted with its own password, in case it gets stolen.  A key
                    273: file, or "key ring" contains one or more of these key certificates. 
                    274: Public key rings contain public key certificates, and secret key
                    275: rings contain secret key certificates.  
                    276: 
                    277: The keys are also internally referenced by a "key ID", which is an 
                    278: "abbreviation" of the public key (the least significant 64 bits of 
                    279: the large public key).  When this key ID is displayed, only the lower
                    280: 24 bits are shown for further brevity.  While many keys may share the
                    281: same user ID, for all practical purposes no two keys share the same
                    282: key ID.  
                    283: 
                    284: PGP uses "message digests" to form signatures.  A message digest is a
                    285: 128-bit cryptographically strong one-way hash function of the
                    286: message.  It is somewhat analogous to a "checksum" or CRC error
                    287: checking code, in that it compactly "represents" the message and is
                    288: used to detect changes in the message.  Unlike a CRC, however, it is
                    289: computationally infeasible for an attacker to devise a substitute
                    290: message that would produce an identical message digest.  The message
                    291: digest gets encrypted by the secret key to form a signature.  
                    292: 
                    293: Documents are signed by prefixing them with signature certificates,
                    294: which contain the key ID of the key that was used to sign it, a
                    295: secret-key-signed message digest of the document, and a timestamp of
                    296: when the signature was made.  The key ID is used by the receiver to
                    297: look up the sender's public key to check the signature.  The
                    298: receiver's software automatically looks up the sender's public key
                    299: and user ID in the receiver's public key ring.
                    300: 
                    301: Encrypted files are prefixed by the key ID of the public key used to
                    302: encrypt them.  The receiver uses this key ID message prefix to look
                    303: up the secret key needed to decrypt the message.  The receiver's 
                    304: software automatically looks up the necessary secret decryption key 
                    305: in the receiver's secret key ring.
                    306: 
                    307: These two types of key rings are the principal method of storing and
                    308: managing public and secret keys.  Rather than keep individual keys in
                    309: separate key files, they are collected in key rings to facilitate the
                    310: automatic lookup of keys either by key ID or by user ID.  Each user
                    311: keeps his own pair of key rings.  An individual public key is
                    312: temporarily kept in a separate file long enough to send to your
                    313: friend who will then add it to her key ring.
                    314: 
                    315: 
                    316: 
                    317: Installing PGP
                    318: ==============
                    319: 
                    320: If you already have PGP version 1.0 for MSDOS, you should first
                    321: rename the old executable file pgp1.exe.  This is so that you can run
                    322: your new version of PGP by typing "pgp" without conflicting with the
                    323: old version.  You can still run the old version of PGP by typing
                    324: "pgp1".
                    325: 
                    326: To install PGP on your MSDOS system, you just have to copy it into a
                    327: suitable directory on your hard disk (like C:\PGP), and use the
                    328: shareware PKUNZIP utility to decompress it from the compressed
                    329: archive PGP release file, called PGP20.ZIP.  For best results, you
                    330: will also modify your AUTOEXEC.BAT file, as described elsewhere in
                    331: this manual, but you can do that later, after you've played with PGP
                    332: a bit and read more of this manual.
                    333: 
                    334: Installing on Unix and VAX/VMS is generally similar to installing on
                    335: MSDOS, but you may have to compile the source code first.  A Unix
                    336: makefile is provided with the source release for this purpose.  
                    337: 
                    338: For further details on installation, see the separate PGP
                    339: Installation Guide, in the file SETUP.DOC included with this
                    340: release.  It fully describes how to set up the PGP directory and your
                    341: AUTOEXEC.BAT file and how to use PKUNZIP to install it.
                    342: 
                    343: 
                    344: 
                    345: How to Use PGP
                    346: ==============
                    347: 
                    348: 
                    349: To See a Usage Summary
                    350: ----------------------
                    351: 
                    352: To see a quick command usage summary for PGP, just type:
                    353: 
                    354:     pgp -h
                    355: 
                    356: 
                    357: 
                    358: Encrypting a Message
                    359: --------------------
                    360: 
                    361: To encrypt a plaintext file with the recipient's public key, type:
                    362: 
                    363:     pgp -e textfile her_userid
                    364: 
                    365: This command produces a ciphertext file called textfile.pgp.  A
                    366: specific example is:
                    367: 
                    368:     pgp -e letter.txt Alice
                    369: or:
                    370:     pgp -e letter.txt "Alice S"
                    371: 
                    372: The first example searches your public key ring file "pubring.pgp"
                    373: for any public key certificates that contain the string "Alice"
                    374: anywhere in the user ID field.  The second example would find any
                    375: user IDs that contain "Alice S".  You can't use spaces in the string
                    376: on the command line unless you enclose the whole string in quotes. 
                    377: The search is not case-sensitive.  If it finds a matching public key,
                    378: it uses it to encrypt the plaintext file "letter.txt", producing a
                    379: ciphertext file called "letter.pgp". 
                    380: 
                    381: PGP attempts to compress the plaintext before encrypting it, thereby
                    382: greatly enhancing resistance to cryptanalysis.  Thus the ciphertext
                    383: file will likely be smaller than the plaintext file.
                    384: 
                    385: If you want to send this encrypted message through E-mail channels,
                    386: convert it into printable ASCII "radix-64" format by adding the -a
                    387: option, as described later.
                    388: 
                    389: 
                    390: 
                    391: Signing a Message
                    392: -----------------
                    393: 
                    394: To sign a plaintext file with your secret key, type:
                    395: 
                    396:     pgp -s textfile [-u your_userid]
                    397: 
                    398: Note that [brackets] denote an optional field, so don't actually type
                    399: real brackets.  
                    400: 
                    401: This command produces a signed file called textfile.pgp.  A specific 
                    402: example is:
                    403: 
                    404:     pgp -s letter.txt -u Bob
                    405: 
                    406: This searches your secret key ring file "secring.pgp" for any secret
                    407: key certificates that contain the string "Bob" anywhere in the user
                    408: ID field.  The search is not case-sensitive.  If it finds a matching
                    409: secret key, it uses it to sign the plaintext file "letter.txt",
                    410: producing a signature file called "letter.pgp". 
                    411: 
                    412: If you leave off the user ID field, the first key on your secret
                    413: keyring is used as the default secret key for your signature.
                    414: 
                    415: 
                    416: 
                    417: Signing and then Encrypting
                    418: ---------------------------
                    419: 
                    420: To sign a plaintext file with your secret key, and then encrypt it 
                    421: with the recipient's public key:
                    422: 
                    423:     pgp -es textfile her_userid [-u your_userid]
                    424: 
                    425: Note that [brackets] denote an optional field, so don't actually type
                    426: real brackets.  
                    427: 
                    428: This example produces a nested ciphertext file called textfile.pgp.
                    429: Your secret key to create the signature is automatically looked up in
                    430: your secret key ring via your_userid.  Her public encryption key is
                    431: automatically looked up in your public keyring via her_userid.  If
                    432: you leave off her user ID field from the command line, you will be 
                    433: prompted for it.
                    434: 
                    435: If you leave off your own user ID field, the first key on your secret
                    436: keyring is be used as the default secret key for your signature.
                    437: 
                    438: Note that PGP attempts to compress the plaintext before encrypting
                    439: it.
                    440: 
                    441: If you want to send this encrypted message through E-mail channels,
                    442: convert it into printable ASCII "radix-64" format by adding the -a
                    443: option, as described later.
                    444: 
                    445: 
                    446: 
                    447: Using Just Conventional Encryption
                    448: ----------------------------------
                    449: 
                    450: Sometimes you just need to encrypt a file the old-fashioned way, with
                    451: conventional single-key cryptography.  This approach is useful for
                    452: protecting archive files that will be stored but will not be sent to
                    453: anyone else.  Since the same person that encrypted the file will also
                    454: decrypt the file, public key cryptography is not really necessary. 
                    455: 
                    456: To encrypt a plaintext file with just conventional cryptography,
                    457: type:
                    458: 
                    459:     pgp -c textfile
                    460: 
                    461: This example encrypts the plaintext file called textfile, producing a
                    462: ciphertext file called textfile.pgp, without using public key
                    463: cryptography, key rings, user IDs, or any of that stuff.  It prompts
                    464: you for a pass phrase to use as a conventional key to encipher the
                    465: file.  This pass phrase need not be (and, indeed, SHOULD not be) the
                    466: same pass phrase that you use to protect your own secret key.  Note
                    467: that PGP attempts to compress the plaintext before encrypting it.  
                    468: 
                    469: PGP will not encrypt the same plaintext the same way twice, even if
                    470: you used the same pass phrase every time.
                    471: 
                    472: 
                    473: 
                    474: Decrypting and Checking Signatures
                    475: ----------------------------------
                    476: 
                    477: To decrypt an encrypted file, or to check the signature integrity of a
                    478: signed file:
                    479: 
                    480:     pgp ciphertextfile [-o plaintextfile]
                    481: 
                    482: Note that [brackets] denote an optional field, so don't actually type
                    483: real brackets.  
                    484: 
                    485: The ciphertext file name is assumed to have a default extension of
                    486: ".pgp".  The optional plaintext output file name specifies where to
                    487: put processed plaintext output.  If no name is specified, the
                    488: ciphertext filename is used, with no extension.  If a signature is
                    489: nested inside of an encrypted file, it is automatically decrypted and
                    490: the signature integrity is checked.  The full user ID of the signer
                    491: is displayed.
                    492: 
                    493: Note that the "unwrapping" of the ciphertext file is completely 
                    494: automatic, regardless of whether the ciphertext file is just signed,
                    495: just encrypted, or both.  PGP uses the key ID prefix in the
                    496: ciphertext file to automatically find the appropriate secret
                    497: decryption key on your secret key ring.  If there is a nested
                    498: signature, PGP then uses the key ID prefix in the nested signature to
                    499: automatically find the appropriate public key on your public key ring
                    500: to check the signature.  If all the right keys are already present on
                    501: your key rings, no user intervention is required, except that you
                    502: will be prompted for your password for your secret key if necessary. 
                    503: If the ciphertext file was conventionally encrypted without public
                    504: key cryptography, PGP recognizes this and prompts you for the pass
                    505: phrase to conventionally decrypt it.
                    506: 
                    507: 
                    508: Managing Keys
                    509: =============
                    510: 
                    511: Since the time of Julius Caesar, key management has always been the
                    512: hardest part of cryptography.  One of the principal distinguishing
                    513: features of PGP is its sophisticated key management.  
                    514: 
                    515: 
                    516: 
                    517: RSA Key Generation
                    518: ------------------
                    519: 
                    520: To generate your own unique public/secret key pair of a specified
                    521: size, type:  
                    522: 
                    523:     pgp -kg
                    524: 
                    525: PGP shows you a menu of recommended key sizes (casual grade,
                    526: commercial grade, or military grade) and prompts you for what size
                    527: key you want, up to around a thousand bits.  The bigger the key, the
                    528: more security you get, but you pay a price in speed.  
                    529: 
                    530: It also asks for a user ID, which means your name.  It's a good idea
                    531: to use your full name as your user ID, because then there is less
                    532: risk of other people using the wrong public key to encrypt messages
                    533: to you.  Spaces and punctuation are allowed in the user ID.  It would
                    534: help if you put your E-mail address in <angle brackets> after your
                    535: name, like so:
                    536:   
                    537:     Robert M. Smith <[email protected]>
                    538: 
                    539: If you don't have an E-mail address, use your phone number or some
                    540: other unique information that would help ensure that your user ID is
                    541: unique.
                    542: 
                    543: PGP also asks for a "pass phrase" to protect your secret key in case
                    544: it falls into the wrong hands.  Nobody can use your secret key file
                    545: without this pass phrase.  The pass phrase is like a password, except
                    546: that it can be a whole phrase or sentence with many words, spaces,
                    547: punctuation, or anything else you want in it.  Don't lose this pass
                    548: phrase-- there's no way to recover it if you do lose it.  This pass
                    549: phrase will be needed later every time you use your secret key.  The
                    550: pass phrase is case-sensitive, and should not be too short or easy to
                    551: guess.  It is never displayed on the screen.  Don't leave it written
                    552: down anywhere where someone else can see it, and don't store it on
                    553: your computer.  If you don't want a pass phrase (You fool!), just
                    554: press return (or enter) at the pass phrase prompt.
                    555: 
                    556: The public/secret key pair is derived from large truly random numbers
                    557: derived from measuring the intervals between your keystrokes with a
                    558: fast timer.
                    559: 
                    560: Note that RSA key generation is a VERY lengthy process.  It may take
                    561: a few seconds for a small key on a fast processor, or quite a few
                    562: minutes for a large key on an old IBM PC/XT.
                    563: 
                    564: The generated key pair will be placed on your public and secret key
                    565: rings.  You can later use the -kx command option to extract (copy)
                    566: your new public key from your public key ring and place it in a
                    567: separate public key file suitable for distribution to your friends. 
                    568: The public key file can be sent to your friends for inclusion in
                    569: their public key rings.  Naturally, you keep your secret key file to
                    570: yourself, and you should include it on your secret key ring.  Each
                    571: secret key on a key ring is individually protected with its own pass
                    572: phrase.  
                    573: 
                    574: Never give your secret key to anyone else.  For the same reason, don't
                    575: make key pairs for your friends.  Everyone should make their own key
                    576: pair.  Always keep physical control of your secret key, and don't risk
                    577: exposing it by storing it on a remote timesharing computer.  Keep it
                    578: on your own personal computer.
                    579: 
                    580: 
                    581: 
                    582: Adding a Key to Your Key Ring
                    583: -----------------------------
                    584: 
                    585: To add a public or secret key file's contents to your public or
                    586: secret key ring (note that [brackets] denote an optional field):
                    587: 
                    588:     pgp -ka keyfile [keyring]
                    589: 
                    590: The keyfile extension defaults to ".pgp".  The optional keyring file
                    591: name defaults to "pubring.pgp" or "secring.pgp", depending on whether
                    592: the keyfile contains a public or a secret key.  You may specify a
                    593: different key ring file name, with the extension defaulting to
                    594: ".pgp".
                    595: 
                    596: If the key is already on your keyring, PGP will not add it again. All
                    597: of the keys in the keyfile are added to the keyring, except for
                    598: duplicates.  If the key being added has attached signatures
                    599: certifying it, the signatures are added with the key.  If the key is
                    600: already on your keyring, PGP just merges in any new certifying
                    601: signatures for that key that you don't already have on your keyring.
                    602: 
                    603: 
                    604: 
                    605: Removing a Key from Your Key Ring
                    606: ---------------------------------
                    607: 
                    608: To remove a key from your public key ring:
                    609: 
                    610:     pgp -kr userid [keyring]
                    611: 
                    612: This searches for the specified user ID in your keyring, and removes
                    613: it if it finds a match.  Remember that any fragment of the user ID
                    614: will suffice for a match.  The optional keyring file name is assumed
                    615: to be literally "pubring.pgp".  It can be omitted, or you can specify
                    616: "secring.pgp" if you want to remove a secret key.  You may specify a
                    617: different key ring file name.  The default key ring extension is
                    618: ".pgp".
                    619: 
                    620: 
                    621: 
                    622: Extracting (copying) a Key from Your Key Ring
                    623: ---------------------------------------------
                    624: 
                    625: To extract (copy) a key from your public or secret key ring:
                    626: 
                    627:     pgp -kx userid keyfile [keyring]
                    628: 
                    629: This non-destructively copies the key specified by the user ID from
                    630: your public or secret key ring to the specified key file.  This is
                    631: particularly useful if you want to give a copy of your public key to
                    632: someone else.
                    633: 
                    634: If the key has any certifying signatures attached to it on your key
                    635: ring, they are copied off along with the key.
                    636: 
                    637: If you want the extracted key represented in printable ASCII
                    638: characters suitable for email purposes, use the -kxa options.
                    639: 
                    640: 
                    641: 
                    642: Viewing the Contents of Your Key Ring
                    643: -------------------------------------
                    644: 
                    645: To view the contents of your public key ring:
                    646: 
                    647:     pgp -kv[v] [userid] [keyring] 
                    648: 
                    649: This lists any keys in the key ring that match the specified user ID
                    650: substring.  If you omit the user ID, all of the keys in the key ring
                    651: are listed.  The optional keyring file name is assumed to be
                    652: "pubring.pgp".  It can be omitted, or you can specify "secring.pgp"
                    653: if you want to list secret keys.  If you want to specify a different
                    654: key ring file name, you can.  The default key ring extension is
                    655: ".pgp".  
                    656: 
                    657: To see all the certifying signatures attached to each key, use the
                    658: -kvv option:
                    659: 
                    660:     pgp -kvv [userid] [keyring] 
                    661: 
                    662: If you want to specify a particular key ring file name, but want to
                    663: see all the keys in it, try this alternative approach:
                    664: 
                    665:     pgp keyfile
                    666: 
                    667: With no command options specified, PGP lists all the keys in
                    668: keyfile.pgp, and also attempts to add them to your key ring if they
                    669: are not already on your key ring.
                    670: 
                    671: 
                    672: 
                    673: How to Protect Public Keys from Tampering
                    674: -----------------------------------------
                    675: 
                    676: In a public key cryptosystem, you don't have to protect public keys
                    677: from exposure.  In fact, it's better if they are widely disseminated.
                    678: But it is important to protect public keys from tampering, to make
                    679: sure that a public key really belongs to whom it appears to belong to.
                    680: This may be the most important vulnerability of a public-key
                    681: cryptosystem.  Let's first look at a potential disaster, then at how
                    682: to safely avoid it with PGP.
                    683: 
                    684: Suppose you wanted to send a private message to Alice.  You download
                    685: Alice's public key certificate from an electronic bulletin board
                    686: system (BBS).  You encrypt your letter to Alice with this public key
                    687: and send it to her through the BBS's E-mail facility.
                    688: 
                    689: Unfortunately, unbeknownst to you or Alice, another user named
                    690: Charlie has infiltrated the BBS and generated a public key of his own
                    691: with Alice's user ID attached to it.  He covertly substitutes his
                    692: bogus key in place of Alice's real public key.  You unwittingly use
                    693: this bogus key belonging to Charlie instead of Alice's public key. 
                    694: All looks normal because this bogus key has Alice's user ID.  Now
                    695: Charlie can decipher the message intended for Alice because he has
                    696: the matching secret key.  He may even re-encrypt the deciphered
                    697: message with Alice's real public key and send it on to her so that no
                    698: one suspects any wrongdoing.  Furthermore, he can even make
                    699: apparently good signatures from Alice with this secret key because
                    700: everyone will use the bogus public key to check Alice's signatures.
                    701: 
                    702: The only way to prevent this disaster is to prevent anyone from
                    703: tampering with public keys.  If you got Alice's public key directly
                    704: from Alice, this is no problem.  But that may be difficult if Alice
                    705: is a thousand miles away, or is currently unreachable.  
                    706: 
                    707: Perhaps you could get Alice's public key from a mutual trusted friend
                    708: David who knows he has a good copy of Alice's public key.  David
                    709: could sign Alice's public key, vouching for the integrity of Alice's
                    710: public key.  David would create this signature with his own secret
                    711: key. 
                    712: 
                    713: This would create a signed public key certificate, and would show
                    714: that Alice's key had not been tampered with.  This requires you have a
                    715: known good copy of David's public key to check his signature.  Perhaps
                    716: David could provide Alice with a signed copy of your public key also.
                    717: David is thus serving as an "introducer" between you and Alice.  
                    718: 
                    719: This signed public key certificate for Alice could be uploaded by
                    720: David or Alice to the BBS, and you could download it later.  You
                    721: could then check the signature via David's public key and thus be
                    722: assured that this is really Alice's public key.  No impostor can fool
                    723: you into accepting his own bogus key as Alice's because no one else
                    724: can forge signatures made by David.
                    725: 
                    726: A widely trusted person could even specialize in providing this
                    727: service of "introducing" users to each other by providing signatures
                    728: for their public key certificates.  This trusted person could be
                    729: regarded as a "key server", or as a "Certifying Authority".  Any
                    730: public key certificates bearing the key server's signature could be
                    731: trusted as truly belonging to whom they appear to belong to.  All
                    732: users who wanted to participate would need a known good copy of just
                    733: the key server's public key, so that the key server's signatures
                    734: could be verified.  
                    735: 
                    736: A trusted centralized key server or Certifying Authority is
                    737: especially appropriate for large impersonal centrally-controlled
                    738: corporate or government institutions.  Some institutional
                    739: environments use hierarchies of Certifying Authorities.
                    740: 
                    741: For more decentralized grassroots "guerrilla style" environments,
                    742: allowing all users to act as a trusted introducers for their friends
                    743: would probably work better than a centralized key server.  PGP tends
                    744: to emphasize this organic decentralized non-institutional approach. 
                    745: It better reflects the natural way humans interact on a personal
                    746: social level, and allows people to better choose who they can trust
                    747: for key management.
                    748: 
                    749: This whole business of protecting public keys from tampering is the
                    750: single most difficult problem in practical public key applications. 
                    751: It is the "Achilles heel" of public key cryptography, and a lot of
                    752: software complexity is tied up in solving this one problem.  
                    753: 
                    754: You should use a public key only after you are sure that it is a good
                    755: public key that has not been tampered with, and actually belongs to
                    756: the person it claims to.  You can be sure of this if you got this
                    757: public key certificate directly from its owner, or if it bears the
                    758: signature of someone else that you trust, from whom you already have
                    759: a good public key.  Also, the user ID should have the full name of
                    760: the key's owner, not just her first name.
                    761: 
                    762: No matter how tempted you are-- and you will be tempted-- never,
                    763: NEVER give in to expediency and trust a public key you downloaded
                    764: from a bulletin board, unless it is signed by someone you trust. 
                    765: That uncertified public key could have been tampered with by anyone,
                    766: maybe even by the system administrator of the bulletin board.
                    767: 
                    768: If you are asked to sign someone else's public key certificate, make
                    769: certain that it really belongs to that person named in the user ID of
                    770: that public key certificate.  This is because your signature on her
                    771: public key certificate is a promise by you that this public key
                    772: really belongs to her.  Other people who trust you will accept her
                    773: public key because it bears your signature.  It may be ill-advised to
                    774: rely on hearsay-- don't sign her public key unless you have
                    775: independent firsthand knowledge that it really belongs to her. 
                    776: Preferably, you should sign it only if you got it directly from her. 
                    777: 
                    778: Bear in mind that your signature on a public key certificate does not
                    779: vouch for the integrity of that person, but only vouches for the
                    780: integrity (the ownership) of that person's public key.  You aren't
                    781: risking your credibility by signing the public key of a sociopath, if
                    782: you were completely confident that the key really belonged to him. 
                    783: Other people would accept that key as belonging to him because you
                    784: signed it (assuming they trust you), but they wouldn't trust that
                    785: key's owner.  Trusting a key is not the same as trusting the key's
                    786: owner.
                    787: 
                    788: Trust is not necessarily transferable; I have a friend who I trust
                    789: not to lie.  He's a gullible person who trusts the President not to
                    790: lie.  That doesn't mean I trust the President not to lie.  This is
                    791: just common sense.  If I trust Alice's signature on a key, and Alice
                    792: trusts Charlie's signature on a key, that does not imply that I have
                    793: to trust Charlie's signature on a key.  
                    794: 
                    795: It would be a good idea to keep your own public key on hand with a
                    796: collection of certifying signatures attached from a variety of
                    797: "introducers", in the hopes that most people will trust at least one
                    798: of the introducers who vouch for your own public key's validity. 
                    799: You could post your key with its attached collection of certifying
                    800: signatures on various electronic bulletin boards.  If you sign
                    801: someone else's public key, return it to them with your signature so
                    802: that they can add it to their own collection of credentials for their
                    803: own public key.
                    804: 
                    805: PGP keeps track of which keys on your public keyring are properly
                    806: certified with signatures from introducers that you trust.  All you
                    807: have to do is tell PGP which people you trust as introducers, and
                    808: certify their keys yourself with your own ultimately trusted key.
                    809: PGP can take it from there, automatically validating any other keys
                    810: that have been signed by your designated introducers.  And of course
                    811: you may directly sign more keys yourself.  More on this later.
                    812: 
                    813: Make sure no one else can tamper with your own public key ring.
                    814: Checking a new signed public key certificate must ultimately depend
                    815: on the integrity of the trusted public keys that are already on your
                    816: own public key ring.  Maintain physical control of your public key
                    817: ring, preferably on your own personal computer rather than on a
                    818: remote timesharing system, just as you would do for your secret key. 
                    819: This is to protect it from tampering, not from disclosure.  Keep a
                    820: trusted backup copy of your public key ring and your secret key ring
                    821: on write-protected media.
                    822: 
                    823: Since your own trusted public key is used as a final authority to
                    824: directly or indirectly certify all the other keys on your keyring, it
                    825: is the most important key to protect from tampering.  To detect any
                    826: tampering of your own ultimately-trusted public key, PGP can be set
                    827: up to automatically compare your public key against a backup copy on
                    828: write-protected media.  For details, see the description of the "-kc"
                    829: keyring check command in the Special Topics volume.
                    830: 
                    831: PGP generally assumes you will maintain physical security over your
                    832: system and your key rings, as well as your copy of PGP itself.  If an
                    833: intruder can tamper with your disk, then in theory he can tamper with
                    834: PGP itself, rendering moot the safeguards PGP may have to detect
                    835: tampering with keys.
                    836: 
                    837: One somewhat complicated way to protect your own whole public key ring
                    838: from tampering is to sign the whole ring with your own secret key. 
                    839: You could do this by making a detached signature certificate of the
                    840: public key ring, by signing the ring with the "-sb" options (see the
                    841: section called "Separating Signatures from Messages" in the PGP
                    842: User's Guide, Special Topics volume).  Unfortunately, you would still
                    843: have to keep a separate trusted copy of your own public key around to
                    844: check the signature you made.  You couldn't rely on your own public
                    845: key stored on your public key ring to check the signature you made
                    846: for the whole ring, because that is part of what you're trying to
                    847: check.  
                    848: 
                    849: 
                    850: 
                    851: How Does PGP Keep Track of Which Keys are Valid?
                    852: ------------------------------------------------
                    853: 
                    854: Before you read this section, be sure to read the above section on 
                    855: "How to Protect Public Keys from Tampering".
                    856: 
                    857: PGP keeps track of which keys on your public keyring are properly
                    858: certified with signatures from introducers that you trust.  All you
                    859: have to do is tell PGP which people you trust as introducers, and
                    860: certify their keys yourself with your own ultimately trusted key.
                    861: PGP can take it from there, automatically validating any other keys
                    862: that have been signed by your designated introducers.  And of course
                    863: you may directly sign more keys yourself.
                    864: 
                    865: There are two entirely separate criteria PGP uses to judge a public
                    866: key's usefulness: 
                    867: 
                    868:   1)  Does the key actually belong to whom it appears to belong?  
                    869:       In other words, has it been certified with a trusted signature?
                    870:   2)  Does it belong to someone we can trust to certify other keys?
                    871: 
                    872: PGP can calculate the answer to the first question.  To answer the
                    873: second question, PGP must be explicitly told by you, the user.  When
                    874: you supply the answer to question 2, PGP can then calculate the
                    875: answer to question 1 for other keys signed by the introducer you
                    876: designated as trusted.
                    877: 
                    878: Keys that have been certified by a trusted introducer are deemed
                    879: valid by PGP.  The keys belonging to trusted introducers must
                    880: themselves be certified either by you or by other trusted
                    881: introducers.
                    882: 
                    883: PGP also allows for the possibility of you having several shades of
                    884: trust for people to act as introducers.  Your trust for a key's owner
                    885: to act as an introducer does not just reflect your estimation of
                    886: their personal integrity-- it should also reflect how competent you
                    887: think they are at understanding key management and using good
                    888: judgement in signing keys.  You can designate a person to PGP as
                    889: unknown, untrusted, marginally trusted, or completely trusted to
                    890: certify other public keys.  This trust information is stored on your
                    891: keyring with their key, but when you tell PGP to copy a key off your
                    892: keyring, PGP will not copy the trust information along with the key,
                    893: because your private opinions on trust are regarded as confidential. 
                    894: 
                    895: When PGP is calculating the validity of a public key, it examines the
                    896: trust level of all the attached certifying signatures.  It computes a
                    897: weighted score of validity-- two marginally trusted signatures are
                    898: deemed as credible as one fully trusted signature.  PGP's skepticism
                    899: is adjustable-- for example, you may tune PGP to require two fully
                    900: trusted signatures or three marginally trusted signatures to judge a
                    901: key as valid.
                    902: 
                    903: Your own key is "axiomatically" valid to PGP, needing no introducer's
                    904: signature to prove its validity.  PGP knows which public keys are
                    905: yours, by looking for the corresponding secret keys on the secret
                    906: keyring.  PGP also assumes you ultimately trust yourself to certify
                    907: other keys.
                    908: 
                    909: As time goes on, you will accumulate keys from other people that you
                    910: may want to designate as trusted introducers.  Everyone else will
                    911: each choose their own trusted introducers.  And everyone will
                    912: gradually accumulate and distribute with their key a collection of
                    913: certifying signatures from other people, with the expectation that
                    914: anyone receiving it will trust at least one or two of the signatures. 
                    915: This will cause the emergence of a decentralized fault-tolerant web
                    916: of confidence for all public keys.
                    917: 
                    918: This unique grass-roots approach contrasts sharply with Government
                    919: standard public key management schemes, such as Internet Privacy
                    920: Enhanced Mail (PEM), which are based on centralized control and
                    921: mandatory centralized trust.  The standard schemes rely on a
                    922: hierarchy of Certifying Authorities who dictate who you must trust. 
                    923: PGP's decentralized probabilistic method for determining public key
                    924: legitimacy is the centerpiece of its key management architecture. 
                    925: PGP lets you alone choose who you trust, putting you at the top of
                    926: your own private certification pyramid.  PGP is for people who prefer
                    927: to pack their own parachutes.
                    928: 
                    929: 
                    930: 
                    931: How to Protect Secret Keys from Disclosure
                    932: ------------------------------------------
                    933: 
                    934: Protect your own secret key and your pass phrase carefully.  Really,
                    935: really carefully.  If your secret key is ever compromised, you'd
                    936: better get the word out quickly to all interested parties (good luck)
                    937: before someone else uses it to make signatures in your name.  For
                    938: example, they could use it to sign bogus public key certificates,
                    939: which could create problems for many people, especially if your
                    940: signature is widely trusted.  And of course, a compromise of your own
                    941: secret key could expose all messages sent to you.
                    942: 
                    943: To protect your secret key, you can start by always keeping physical
                    944: control of your secret key.  Keeping it on your personal computer at
                    945: home is OK, or keep it in your notebook computer that you can carry
                    946: with you.  If you must use an office computer that you don't always
                    947: have physical control of, then keep your public and secret key rings
                    948: on a write-protected removable floppy disk, and don't leave it behind
                    949: when you leave the office.  It wouldn't be a good idea to allow your
                    950: secret key to reside on a remote timesharing computer, such as a
                    951: remote dial-in Unix system.  Someone could eavesdrop on your modem
                    952: line and capture your pass phrase, and then obtain your actual secret
                    953: key from the remote system.  You should only use your secret key on a
                    954: machine that you have physical control over.  
                    955: 
                    956: Don't store your pass phrase anywhere on the computer that has your
                    957: secret key file.  Storing both the secret key and the pass phrase on
                    958: the same computer is as dangerous as keeping your PIN in the same
                    959: wallet as your Automatic Teller Machine bank card.  You don't want
                    960: somebody to get their hands on your disk containing both the pass
                    961: phrase and the secret key file.  It would be most secure if you just
                    962: memorize your pass phrase and don't store it anywhere but your brain.  
                    963: If you feel you must write down your pass phrase, keep it well
                    964: protected, perhaps even more well protected than the secret key file.
                    965: 
                    966: And keep backup copies of your secret key ring-- remember, you have
                    967: the only copy of your secret key, and losing it will render useless
                    968: all the copies of your public key that you have spread throughout the
                    969: world.  
                    970: 
                    971: The decentralized non-institutional approach PGP uses to manage
                    972: public keys has its benefits, but unfortunately this also means we
                    973: can't rely on a single centralized list of which keys have been
                    974: compromised.  This makes it a bit harder to contain the damage of a
                    975: secret key compromise.  You just have to spread the word and hope
                    976: everyone hears about it.
                    977: 
                    978: If the worst case happens-- your secret key and pass phrase are both
                    979: compromised (hopefully you will find this out somehow)-- you will
                    980: have to issue a "key compromise" certificate.  This kind of
                    981: certificate is used to warn other people to stop using your public
                    982: key.  You can use PGP to create such a certificate by using the "-kd"
                    983: command.  Then you must somehow send this compromise certificate to
                    984: everyone else on the planet, or at least to all your friends and
                    985: their friends, et cetera.  Their own PGP software will install this
                    986: key compromise certificate on their public keyrings and will
                    987: automatically prevent them from accidentally using your public key
                    988: ever again.  You can then generate a new secret/public key pair and
                    989: publish the new public key.  You could send out one package containing
                    990: both your new public key and the key compromise certificate for your 
                    991: old key.
                    992: 
                    993: 
                    994: 
                    995: Revoking a Public Key
                    996: ---------------------
                    997: 
                    998: Suppose your secret key and your pass phrase are somehow both
                    999: compromised.  You have to get the word out to the rest of the world,
                   1000: so that they will all stop using your public key.  To do this, you 
                   1001: will have to issue a "key compromise" certificate to revoke your
                   1002: public key.
                   1003: 
                   1004: To generate a key compromise certificate, use the -kd command:
                   1005: 
                   1006:      pgp -kd your_userid
                   1007: 
                   1008: You should widely disseminate this key compromise certificate as soon
                   1009: as possible.  Other people who receive it can add it to their public
                   1010: keyrings, and their PGP software then automatically prevents them
                   1011: from accidentally using your old public key ever again.  You can then
                   1012: generate a new secret/public key pair and publish the new public key.
                   1013: 
                   1014: You may choose to revoke your key for some other reason than the
                   1015: compromise of a secret key.  If so, you may still use the same
                   1016: mechanism to revoke it.
                   1017: 
                   1018: 
                   1019: 
                   1020: Advanced Topics
                   1021: ===============
                   1022: 
                   1023: Most of the "Advanced Topics" are covered in the "PGP User's Guide,
                   1024: Volume II:  Special Topics".  But here are a few topics that bear
                   1025: mentioning here.
                   1026: 
                   1027: 
                   1028: Sending Ciphertext Through E-mail Channels: Radix-64 Format
                   1029: -----------------------------------------------------------
                   1030: 
                   1031: Many electronic mail systems only allow messages made of ASCII text,
                   1032: not the 8-bit raw binary data that ciphertext is made of.  To get
                   1033: around this problem, PGP supports ASCII radix-64 format for
                   1034: ciphertext messages, similar to the Internet Privacy-Enhanced Mail
                   1035: (PEM) format.  This special format represents binary data by using
                   1036: only printable ASCII characters, so it is useful for transmitting
                   1037: binary encrypted data through 7-bit channels or for sending binary
                   1038: encrypted data as normal E-mail text.  This format acts as a form of
                   1039: "transport armor", protecting it against corruption as it travels
                   1040: through intersystem gateways on Internet.  It also appends a CRC to 
                   1041: detect transmission errors.
                   1042: 
                   1043: Radix-64 format converts the plaintext by expanding groups of 3
                   1044: binary 8-bit bytes into 4 printable ASCII characters, so the file
                   1045: grows by about 33%.  But this expansion isn't so bad when you
                   1046: consider that the file probably was compressed more than that by PGP
                   1047: before it was encrypted.
                   1048: 
                   1049: To produce a ciphertext file in ASCII radix-64 format, just add the
                   1050: "a" option when encrypting or signing a message, like so:
                   1051: 
                   1052:     pgp -esa message.txt her_userid
                   1053: 
                   1054: This example produces a ciphertext file called "message.asc" that
                   1055: contains data in a PEM-like ASCII radix-64 format.  This file can be
                   1056: easily uploaded into a text editor through 7-bit channels for
                   1057: transmission as normal E-mail on Internet or any other E-mail
                   1058: network.
                   1059: 
                   1060: Decrypting the radix-64 transport-armored message is no different than
                   1061: a normal decrypt.  For example:
                   1062: 
                   1063:     pgp message
                   1064: 
                   1065: PGP automatically looks for the ASCII file "message.asc" before it
                   1066: looks for the binary file "message.pgp".  It recognizes that the file
                   1067: is in radix-64 format and converts it back to binary before
                   1068: processing as it normally does, producing as a by-product a ".pgp"
                   1069: ciphertext file in binary form.  The final output file is in normal
                   1070: plaintext form, just as it was in the original file "message.txt".
                   1071: 
                   1072: Most Internet E-mail facilities prohibit sending messages that are
                   1073: more than 50000 bytes long.  Longer messages must be broken into
                   1074: smaller chunks that can be mailed separately.  If your encrypted
                   1075: message is very large, and you requested radix-64 format, PGP 
                   1076: automatically breaks it up into chunks that are each small enough to
                   1077: send via E-mail.  The chunks are put into files named with extensions
                   1078: ".as1", ".as2", ".as3", etc.  The recipient must concatenate these
                   1079: separate files back together in their proper order into one big file
                   1080: before decrypting it.  While decrypting, PGP ignores any extraneous
                   1081: text in mail headers that are not enclosed in the radix-64 message
                   1082: blocks.
                   1083: 
                   1084: If you want to send a public key to someone else in radix-64 format,
                   1085: just add the -a option while extracting the key from your keyring.
                   1086: 
                   1087: If you forgot to use the -a option when you made a ciphertext file or
                   1088: extracted a key, you may still directly convert the binary file into
                   1089: radix-64 format by simply using the -a option alone, without any
                   1090: encryption specified.  PGP converts it to a ".asc" file.
                   1091: 
                   1092: 
                   1093: 
                   1094: Environmental Variable for Path Name
                   1095: ------------------------------------
                   1096: 
                   1097: PGP uses several special files for its purposes, such as your
                   1098: standard key ring files "pubring.pgp" and "secring.pgp", the random
                   1099: number seed file "randseed.bin", the PGP configuration file
                   1100: "config.txt", and the foreign language string translation file
                   1101: "language.txt".  These special files can be kept in any directory, by
                   1102: setting the environmental variable "PGPPATH" to the desired pathname. 
                   1103: For example, on MSDOS, the shell command:
                   1104: 
                   1105:     SET PGPPATH=C:\PGP
                   1106: 
                   1107: makes PGP assume that your public key ring filename is 
                   1108: "C:\PGP\pubring.pgp".  Assuming, of course, that this directory
                   1109: exists.  Use your favorite text editor to modify your MSDOS
                   1110: AUTOEXEC.BAT file to automatically set up this variable whenever you
                   1111: start up your system.  If PGPPATH remains undefined, these special
                   1112: files are assumed to be in the current directory.
                   1113: 
                   1114: 
                   1115: 
                   1116: Setting Configuration Parameters: CONFIG.TXT
                   1117: --------------------------------------------
                   1118: 
                   1119: PGP has a number of user-settable parameters that can be defined in a
                   1120: special configuration text file called "config.txt", in the directory
                   1121: pointed to by the shell environmental variable PGPPATH.  Having a
                   1122: configuration file enables the user to define various flags and
                   1123: parameters for PGP without the burden of having to always define
                   1124: these parameters in the PGP command line.  
                   1125: 
                   1126: With these configuration parameters, for example, you can control
                   1127: where PGP stores its temporary scratch files, or you can select what
                   1128: foreign language PGP will use to display its diagnostics messages and
                   1129: user prompts, or you can adjust PGP's level of skepticism in
                   1130: determining a key's validity based on the number of certifying
                   1131: signatures it has.
                   1132: 
                   1133: For more details on setting these configuration parameters, see the
                   1134: appropriate section of the PGP User's Guide, Special Topics volume.
                   1135: 
                   1136: 
                   1137: 
                   1138: Vulnerabilities
                   1139: ---------------
                   1140: 
                   1141: No data security system is impenetrable.  PGP can be circumvented in
                   1142: a variety of ways.  Potential vulnerabilities you should be aware of
                   1143: include compromising your pass phrase or secret key, public key
                   1144: tampering, files that you deleted but are still somewhere on the
                   1145: disk, viruses and Trojan horses, breaches in your physical security,
                   1146: electromagnetic emissions, exposure on multi-user systems, traffic
                   1147: analysis, and perhaps even direct cryptanalysis.
                   1148: 
                   1149: For a detailed discussion of these issues, see the "Vulnerabilities"
                   1150: section in the PGP User's Guide, Special Topics volume.
                   1151: 
                   1152: 
                   1153: Trusting Snake Oil
                   1154: ==================
                   1155: 
                   1156: When examining a cryptographic software package, the question always
                   1157: remains, why should you trust this product?  Even if you examined the
                   1158: source code yourself, not everyone has the cryptographic experience
                   1159: to judge the security.  Even if you are an experienced cryptographer,
                   1160: subtle weaknesses in the algorithms could still elude you. 
                   1161: 
                   1162: When I was in college in the early seventies, I devised what I
                   1163: believed was a brilliant encryption scheme.  A simple pseudorandom
                   1164: number stream was added to the plaintext stream to create
                   1165: ciphertext.  This would seemingly thwart any frequency analysis of
                   1166: the ciphertext, and would be uncrackable even to the most resourceful
                   1167: Government intelligence agencies.  I felt so smug about my
                   1168: achievement.  So cock-sure.  
                   1169: 
                   1170: Years later, I discovered this same scheme in several introductory
                   1171: cryptography texts and tutorial papers.  How nice.  Other
                   1172: cryptographers had thought of the same scheme.  Unfortunately, the
                   1173: scheme was presented as a simple homework assignment on how to use
                   1174: elementary cryptanalytic techniques to trivially crack it.  So much
                   1175: for my brilliant scheme.
                   1176: 
                   1177: From this humbling experience I learned how easy it is to fall into a
                   1178: false sense of security when devising an encryption algorithm.  Most
                   1179: people don't realize how fiendishly difficult it is to devise an
                   1180: encryption algorithm that can withstand a prolonged and determined
                   1181: attack by a resourceful opponent.  Many mainstream software engineers
                   1182: have developed equally naive encryption schemes (often even the very
                   1183: same encryption scheme), and some of them have been incorporated into
                   1184: commercial encryption software packages and sold for good money to
                   1185: thousands of unsuspecting users. 
                   1186: 
                   1187: This is like selling automotive seat belts that look good and feel
                   1188: good, but snap open in even the slowest crash test.  Depending on
                   1189: them may be worse than not wearing seat belts at all.  No one
                   1190: suspects they are bad until a real crash.  Depending on weak
                   1191: cryptographic software may cause you to unknowingly place sensitive
                   1192: information at risk.  You might not otherwise have done so if you had
                   1193: no cryptographic software at all.  Perhaps you may never even
                   1194: discover your data has been compromised.
                   1195: 
                   1196: Sometimes commercial packages use the Federal Data Encryption
                   1197: Standard (DES), a good conventional algorithm recommended by the
                   1198: Government for commercial use (but not for classified information,
                   1199: oddly enough-- hmmm).  There are several "modes of operation" the 
                   1200: DES can use, some of them better than others.  The Government
                   1201: specifically recommends not using the weakest simplest mode for
                   1202: messages, the Electronic Codebook (ECB) mode.  But they do recommend
                   1203: the stronger and more complex Cipher Feedback (CFB) or Cipher Block
                   1204: Chaining (CBC) modes.  
                   1205: 
                   1206: Unfortunately, most of the commercial encryption packages I've looked
                   1207: at use ECB mode.  When I've talked to the authors of a number of
                   1208: these implementations, they say they've never heard of CBC or CFB
                   1209: modes, and didn't know anything about the weaknesses of ECB mode. 
                   1210: The very fact that they haven't even learned enough cryptography to
                   1211: know these elementary concepts is not reassuring.  These same
                   1212: software packages often include a second faster encryption algorithm
                   1213: that can be used instead of the slower DES.  The author of the
                   1214: package often thinks his proprietary faster algorithm is as secure as
                   1215: the DES, but after questioning him I usually discover that it's just
                   1216: a variation of my own brilliant scheme from college days.  Or maybe
                   1217: he won't even reveal how his proprietary encryption scheme works, but
                   1218: assures me it's a brilliant scheme and I should trust it.  I'm sure
                   1219: he believes that his algorithm is brilliant, but how can I know that
                   1220: without seeing it?  
                   1221: 
                   1222: In all fairness I must point out that in most cases these products do
                   1223: not come from companies that specialize in cryptographic technology.
                   1224: 
                   1225: There is a company called AccessData (87 East 600 South, Orem, Utah
                   1226: 84058, phone 1-800-658-5199) that sells a package for $185 that
                   1227: cracks the built-in encryption schemes used by WordPerfect, Lotus
                   1228: 1-2-3, MS Excel, Symphony, Quattro Pro, Paradox, and MS Word 2.0.  It
                   1229: doesn't simply guess passwords-- it does real cryptanalysis.  Some
                   1230: people buy it when they forget their password for their own files. 
                   1231: Law enforcement agencies buy it too, so they can read files they
                   1232: seize.  I talked to Eric Thompson, the author, and he said his
                   1233: program only takes a split second to crack them, but he put in some
                   1234: delay loops to slow it down so it doesn't look so easy to the
                   1235: customer.  He also told me that the password encryption feature of
                   1236: PKZIP files can be easily broken, and that his law enforcement
                   1237: customers already have that service regularly provided to them from
                   1238: another vendor. 
                   1239: 
                   1240: In some ways, cryptography is like pharmaceuticals.  Its integrity
                   1241: may be absolutely crucial.  Bad penicillin looks the same as good
                   1242: penicillin.  You can tell if your spreadsheet software is wrong, but
                   1243: how do you tell if your cryptography package is weak?  The ciphertext
                   1244: produced by a weak encryption algorithm looks as good as ciphertext
                   1245: produced by a strong encryption algorithm.  There's a lot of snake
                   1246: oil out there.  A lot of quack cures.  Unlike the patent medicine
                   1247: hucksters of old, these software implementors usually don't even know
                   1248: their stuff is snake oil.  They may be good software engineers, but 
                   1249: they usually haven't even read any of the academic literature in
                   1250: cryptography.  But they think they can write good cryptographic
                   1251: software.  And why not?  After all, it seems intuitively easy to do
                   1252: so.  And their software seems to work okay.    
                   1253: 
                   1254: Anyone who thinks they have devised an unbreakable encryption scheme
                   1255: either is an incredibly rare genius or is naive and inexperienced.
                   1256: 
                   1257: I remember a conversation with Brian Snow, a highly placed senior
                   1258: cryptographer with the NSA.  He said he would never trust an
                   1259: encryption algorithm designed by someone who had not "earned their
                   1260: bones" by first spending a lot of time cracking codes.  That did make
                   1261: a lot of sense.  I observed that practically no one in the commercial
                   1262: world of cryptography qualified under this criterion.  "Yes", he said
                   1263: with a self assured smile, "And that makes our job at NSA so much
                   1264: easier."  A chilling thought.  I didn't qualify either.
                   1265: 
                   1266: The Government has peddled snake oil too.  After World War II, the US
                   1267: sold German Enigma ciphering machines to third world governments.
                   1268: But they didn't tell them that the Allies cracked the Enigma code
                   1269: during the war, a fact that remained classified for many years.  Even
                   1270: today many Unix systems worldwide use the Enigma cipher for file
                   1271: encryption, in part because the Government has created legal
                   1272: obstacles against using better algorithms.  They even tried to
                   1273: prevent the initial publication of the RSA algorithm in 1977.  And
                   1274: they have squashed essentially all commercial efforts to develop
                   1275: effective secure telephones for the general public. 
                   1276: 
                   1277: The principle job of the US Government's National Security Agency is
                   1278: to gather intelligence, principally by covertly tapping into people's
                   1279: private communications (see James Bamford's book, "The Puzzle
                   1280: Palace").  The NSA has amassed considerable skill and resources for
                   1281: cracking codes.  When people can't get good cryptography to protect
                   1282: themselves, it makes NSA's job much easier.  NSA also has the
                   1283: responsibility of approving and recommending encryption algorithms. 
                   1284: Some critics charge that this is a conflict of interest, like putting
                   1285: the fox in charge of guarding the hen house.  NSA has been pushing a
                   1286: conventional encryption algorithm that they designed, and they won't
                   1287: tell anybody how it works because that's classified.  They want
                   1288: others to trust it and use it.  But any cryptographer can tell you
                   1289: that a well-designed encryption algorithm does not have to be
                   1290: classified to remain secure.  Only the keys should need protection. 
                   1291: How does anyone else really know if NSA's classified algorithm is
                   1292: secure?  It's not that hard for NSA to design an encryption algorithm
                   1293: that only they can crack, if no one else can review the algorithm. 
                   1294: Are they deliberately selling snake oil? 
                   1295: 
                   1296: I'm not as certain about the security of PGP as I once was about my
                   1297: brilliant encryption software from college.  If I were, that would be
                   1298: a bad sign.  But I'm pretty sure that PGP does not contain any
                   1299: glaring weaknesses.  The crypto algorithms were developed by people
                   1300: at high levels of civilian cryptographic academia, and have been
                   1301: individually subject to extensive peer review.  Source code is
                   1302: available to facilitate peer review of PGP and to help dispel the
                   1303: fears of some users.  It's reasonably well researched, and has been
                   1304: years in the making.  And I don't work for the NSA.  I hope it
                   1305: doesn't require too large a "leap of faith" to trust the security of
                   1306: PGP.
                   1307: 
                   1308: 
                   1309: PGP Quick Reference
                   1310: ===================
                   1311: 
                   1312: Here's a quick summary of PGP commands.
                   1313: 
                   1314: 
                   1315: To encrypt a plaintext file with the recipient's public key:
                   1316:      pgp -e textfile her_userid
                   1317: 
                   1318: To sign a plaintext file with your secret key:
                   1319:      pgp -s textfile [-u your_userid]
                   1320: 
                   1321: To sign a plaintext file with your secret key, and then encrypt it 
                   1322: with the recipient's public key:
                   1323:      pgp -es textfile her_userid [-u your_userid]
                   1324: 
                   1325: To encrypt a plaintext file with just conventional cryptography, type:
                   1326:      pgp -c textfile
                   1327: 
                   1328: To decrypt an encrypted file, or to check the signature integrity of a
                   1329: signed file:
                   1330:      pgp ciphertextfile [-o plaintextfile]
                   1331: 
                   1332: --- Key management commands:
                   1333: 
                   1334: To generate your own unique public/secret key pair:
                   1335:      pgp -kg
                   1336: 
                   1337: To add a public or secret key file's contents to your public or
                   1338: secret key ring:
                   1339:      pgp -ka keyfile [keyring]
                   1340: 
                   1341: To extract (copy) a key from your public or secret key ring:
                   1342:      pgp -kx userid keyfile [keyring]
                   1343: or:  pgp -kxa userid keyfile [keyring]
                   1344: 
                   1345: To view the contents of your public key ring:
                   1346:      pgp -kv[v] [userid] [keyring] 
                   1347: 
                   1348: To view the contents and check the certifying signatures of your 
                   1349: public key ring:
                   1350:      pgp -kc [userid] [keyring] 
                   1351: 
                   1352: To edit the userid or pass phrase for your secret key:
                   1353:      pgp -ke userid [keyring]
                   1354: 
                   1355: To edit the trust parameters for a public key:
                   1356:      pgp -ke userid [keyring]
                   1357: 
                   1358: To remove a key or just a userid from your public key ring:
                   1359:      pgp -kr userid [keyring]
                   1360: 
                   1361: To sign and certify someone else's public key on your public key ring:
                   1362:      pgp -ks her_userid [-u your_userid] [keyring]
                   1363: 
                   1364: To remove selected signatures from a userid on a keyring:
                   1365:      pgp -krs userid [keyring]
                   1366: 
                   1367: --- Esoteric commands:
                   1368: 
                   1369: To decrypt a message and leave the signature on it intact:
                   1370:      pgp -d ciphertextfile
                   1371: 
                   1372: To create a signature certificate that is detached from the document:
                   1373:      pgp -sb textfile [-u your_userid]
                   1374: 
                   1375: To detach a signature certificate from a signed message:
                   1376:      pgp -b ciphertextfile
                   1377: 
                   1378: --- Command options that can be used in combination with other 
                   1379: command options (sometimes even spelling interesting words!):
                   1380: 
                   1381: To produce a ciphertext file in ASCII radix-64 format, just add the
                   1382: -a option when encrypting or signing a message or extracting a key:
                   1383:      pgp -sea textfile her_userid
                   1384: or:  pgp -kxa userid keyfile [keyring]
                   1385: 
                   1386: To wipe out the plaintext file after producing the ciphertext file,
                   1387: just add the -w (wipe) option when encrypting or signing a message:
                   1388:      pgp -sew message.txt her_userid
                   1389: 
                   1390: To specify that a plaintext file contains ASCII text, not binary, and
                   1391: should be converted to recipient's local text line conventions, add
                   1392: the -t (text) option to other options:
                   1393:      pgp -seat message.txt her_userid
                   1394: 
                   1395: To view the decrypted plaintext output on your screen (like the
                   1396: Unix-style "more" command), without writing it to a file, use 
                   1397: the -m (more) option while decrypting:
                   1398:      pgp -m ciphertextfile
                   1399: 
                   1400: To specify that the recipient's decrypted plaintext will be shown
                   1401: ONLY on her screen and cannot be saved to disk, add the -m option:
                   1402:      pgp -steam message.txt her_userid
                   1403: 
                   1404: To recover the original plaintext filename while decrypting, add 
                   1405: the -p option:
                   1406:      pgp -p ciphertextfile
                   1407: 
                   1408: To use a Unix-style filter mode, reading from standard input and
                   1409: writing to standard output, add the -f option:
                   1410:      pgp -feast her_userid <inputfile >outputfile
                   1411: 
                   1412: 
                   1413: 
                   1414: Legal Issues
                   1415: ============
                   1416: 
                   1417: For detailed information on PGP licensing, distribution, copyrights,
                   1418: patents, trademarks, liability limitations, and export controls, see
                   1419: the "Legal Issues" section in the "PGP User's Guide, Volume II: 
                   1420: Special Topics".
                   1421: 
                   1422: PGP uses a public key algorithm claimed by U.S. patent #4,405,829. 
                   1423: The exclusive rights to this patent are held by a California company
                   1424: called Public Key Partners, and you may be infringing this patent if
                   1425: you use PGP in the USA.  This is explained in the Volume II manual.
                   1426: 
                   1427: PGP is "guerrilla" freeware, and I don't mind if you distribute it
                   1428: widely.  Just don't ask me to send you a copy.  Instead, you can get
                   1429: it yourself from many BBS systems and a number of Internet FTP sites.  
                   1430: 
                   1431: 
                   1432: 
                   1433: Acknowledgments
                   1434: ================
                   1435: 
                   1436: I'd like to thank the following people for their contributions to the
                   1437: creation of Pretty Good Privacy.  Although I was the author of PGP
                   1438: version 1.0, major parts of later versions of PGP were implemented by
                   1439: an international collaborative effort involving a large number of
                   1440: contributors.
                   1441: 
                   1442: Branko Lankester, Hal Finney and Peter Gutmann all contributed a
                   1443: huge amount of time in adding features for PGP 2.0, and ported it to
                   1444: Unix variants.  Hal and Branko made Herculean efforts in implementing
                   1445: my new key management protocols.  
                   1446: 
                   1447: Hugh Kennedy ported it to VAX/VMS, Lutz Frank ported it to the Atari
                   1448: ST, and Cor Bosman ported it to the Commodore Amiga.
                   1449: 
                   1450: Translation of PGP into foreign languages was done by Jean-loup
                   1451: Gailly in France, Armando Ramos in Spain, Felipe Rodriquez Svensson
                   1452: and Branko Lankester in The Netherlands, Miguel Angel Gallardo in
                   1453: Spain, Lutz Frank and Hugh Kennedy in Germany, David Vincenzetti in
                   1454: Italy, Harry Bush and Maris Gabalins in Latvia, Zygimantas Cepaitis
                   1455: in Lithuania, Peter Suchkow and Andrew Chernov in Russia, and
                   1456: Alexander Smishlajev in Esperantia.  Peter Gutmann offered to
                   1457: translate it into New Zealand English, but we finally decided PGP
                   1458: could get by with US English. 
                   1459: 
                   1460: Jean-loup Gailly, Mark Adler, and Richard B. Wales published the ZIP
                   1461: compression code, and granted permission for inclusion into PGP.  The
                   1462: MD5 routines were developed and placed in the public domain by Ron
                   1463: Rivest.  The IDEA(tm) cipher was developed by Xuejia Lai and James L.
                   1464: Massey at ETH in Zurich, and is used in PGP with permission from
                   1465: Ascom-Tech AG. 
                   1466: 
                   1467: Charlie Merritt originally taught me how to do decent multiprecision 
                   1468: arithmetic for public key cryptography, and Jimmy Upton contributed a
                   1469: faster multiply/modulo algorithm.  Zhahai Stewart contributed a lot
                   1470: of useful ideas on PGP file formats and other stuff, including having
                   1471: more than one user ID for a key.  I heard the idea of introducers
                   1472: from Whit Diffie.  Kelly Goen did most of the work for the initial
                   1473: electronic publication of PGP 1.0.
                   1474: 
                   1475: 
                   1476: 
                   1477: About the Author
                   1478: ================
                   1479: 
                   1480: Philip Zimmermann is a software engineer consultant with 18 years
                   1481: experience, specializing in embedded real-time systems, cryptography,
                   1482: authentication, and data communications.  Experience includes design
                   1483: and implementation of authentication systems for financial
                   1484: information networks, network data security, key management
                   1485: protocols, embedded real-time multitasking executives, operating
                   1486: systems, and local area networks.  
                   1487: 
                   1488: Custom versions of cryptography and authentication products and 
                   1489: public key implementations such as the NIST DSS are available from
                   1490: Zimmermann, as well as custom product development services.  His
                   1491: consulting firm's address is: 
                   1492: 
                   1493: Boulder Software Engineering
                   1494: 3021 Eleventh Street
                   1495: Boulder, Colorado 80304  USA
                   1496: Phone 303-541-0140 (voice or FAX)  (10:00am - 7:00pm Mountain Time)
                   1497: Internet:  [email protected]
                   1498: 
                   1499: 
                   1500: 

unix.superglobalmegacorp.com

This archive runs on limited infrastructure. Preserving old code on modern bandwidth. Automated agents are requested to crawl responsibly.