Quote from: FenderGuitarMan on July 23, 2012, 07:16 pmExcellent thoughts Pine. I don't have that many keys imported into my GPG Keychain. On quick inspection, I don't have many that don't have an email that mimics their SR name. I just compared the key to these and it is different text. What's interesting here is that the vendor does show up in the GPG Keychain Access display. I can see their key and export. To double check I copied the public key from their SR profile again and reimported and it said:count of processed keys: 1count of unchanged keys: 1After looking at the keys I've imported I don't think I've imported this same key under another name, but that was a great guess. And it doesn't look like the vendor picked an unfortunate name either since I see the seller right in the list. This is strange. I wish I knew that other people can successfully encrypt using this seller's key before I waste a lot of time debugging. There's a chance I may be using this seller again. I am really uncomfortable with unencrypted or 3rd-party encrypted addresses (as in privnote.com).Then it can surely only be either:A: A bug in the PGP implementation prompted by this particular public key.B: A corrupted PGP public key, it imports correctly, but has something wrong with it.Most likely B, but let's wait for Guru's report first.Quote from: FenderGuitarMan on July 23, 2012, 07:16 pmThanks for taking a shot at answering this. Are you really a gorgeous woman? Nothing I like better than a woman who knows how to get geeky!I think the next step is for me to learn the command line toolsI think I am especially attractive amongst mammals, but my sex will always remain indeterminate since I take my vow of anonymity seriously. To quote our comrades from the Polyfront and OVDB collectives:QuoteThe literal definition of anonymity is a state of namelessness. A more technical definition of anonymity is the state of being indistinguishable from a given set size.