Quote from: jameslink2 on August 08, 2012, 12:29 pmQuote from: krettzle on August 08, 2012, 12:21 pmWell....I did sign my address when encrypting, and forgot to include my pgp key. Should I write the seller a new message with my public key, or should I just keep this as a reminder, when signing a key always to include my own pgp key?Yes, you can send your key to the seller in a message as well. I would just to be safe.I agree Pine, I would prefer that all communication is encrypted. Some just want the address or sensitive information but I personally want everything encrypted. The more that is encrypted the harder it is for someone to decided which message is worth trying to break the decryption on and which is not. Along the same lines as shredding sensitive documents. If the only documents you shred are the sensitive ones then it would be worthwhile to try to rebuild the documents from the pieces. If you shred your sensitive documents and your junk mail then there is a lot of junk/garbage that would make it not worth the time to reconstruct.Excatly, an apt metaphor. The larger the anonymity set the better.To wit: 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. As an example, imagine a closed communication interface with several hundred members. If all of the members use the name 'anonymous' to make their posts, they are indistinguishable from each other based on naming information (however, they may not be anonymous based off IP information). However, they are not indistinguishable from those who are not a part of the system. If two people have access to an anonymous suggestion box, any suggestion in the box may be anonymous but the set size is two. The higher your set size is, the more anonymous you are.-- Project PolyFront