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Which portable PGP ?


abarbarian

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So which should I go for ?

 

Portable PGP :: PGP Everywhere!

 

http://www.pgpguide.20m.com/#PortablePGP

 

 

PortablePGP is available in a free USB memory stick version which can be used anywhere without installation on Windows and some GNU/Linux.

Text messages are encrypted and decrypted simply by copying and pasting.

 

Or the horny ones version ?

 

http://www.gpg4usb.org/docu_concepts.html

 

https://www.deepdotweb.com/2015/06/21/pgp-tutorial-for-newbs-gpg4usb/

 

Gpg4usb is a PGP tool that can be ran off of a USB drive and works on both Windows and GNU/Linux, with OS X support planned. It features a very intuitive user interface, portability so it can be used on multiple devices, and is of course open source. It uses GnuPG as the backend, like most PGP methods.

 

Or should I get one of these ?

 

https://fsfe.org/fellowship/card.en.html

 

 

The Fellowship card is a so-called "smart card" and requires a smart card reader for your computer. Using your Fellowship card in combination with a smart card reader, you can:

  • Sign and encrypt your email.
  • Use your Fellowship card for single sign-on at your computer.
  • Log in remotely on your machines using SSH. Because the key is stored in hardware and can never leave the card, you can even do this safely from a potentially insecure machine.
  • Use the Fellowship card only for subkeys of your normal GPG key, as described in the GnuPG Smartcard Howto under Advanced Features or the howtos in our wiki. Using your Fellowship card with subkeys is recommended.

 

 

:breakfast:

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Well I have done some reading up on the Yubikey. I will have to let all that info settle and then have another read.

 

https://christiaanconover.com/blog/yubikeyconfig

 

For many months I’ve been using a Yubikey as a staple of my cyber security plan. It makes me exponentially more secure and at the same time makes it easier for me to stay secure. The only part of it that isn’t drop-dead simple is the configuration, though even that isn’t very difficult. I’m going to show you step by step how to configure your Yubikey to get the most out of it and set yourself up for success.

 

Two Weeks With The Yubikey

 

 

It's now been a full two weeks since I purchased my Yubikey and have been using it. The goal was to have a security token that I could use as a form of two-factor authentication for most if not all of my accounts. After two weeks of use, I figured I would write about it, and let you know my impressions.

 

:fish:

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