Martin f. Krafft wrote about the Edinburgh Keysigning, and I find his post very interesting.
I did not take part in either keysigning. The first one I missed because I was in the sauna (which was a lot of fun). The second I missed because my uncle died that evening (which was less fun; but mostly expected).
So I expected to receive no new signatures:
skx@vain:~/Debian/Etch/hiki$ gpg-get-key No key specified, defaulting to Steve's. Updating key from keyring.debian.org gpg: requesting key CD4C0D9D from hkp server keyring.debian.org gpg: key CD4C0D9D: "Steve Kemp" 18 new signatures
So 18 several people signed my key without checking for valid identification. Is that good? Is that bad? I think it is appalling. But maybe I'm taking it too seriously.
(I just realised 18 sigs != 18 people. So not quite as bad as I initially thought.)
Tags: debconf7, gpg, keysigning, trust No comments