Okay, here's the dilemma, I'm trying to use GnuPG (or any crypto program for that matter) to encrypt output from a cgi-script and then email the results to me.
The problem is, GnuPG doesn't trust the key I imported so it prompts to ask me if I want to use this key even though it isn't trusted. Well, I'm not smart enough to write a script that calls gpg and then chooses 'y' when prompted. Running it with the default --yes doesn't work for this. I've done everything I can think of to get it to trust the key, but I still can't figure out how. I've edited the key, imported trust, updated trust, it still shows up as untrusted (except when I edit it, then it shows full trust).
Can anyone tell me what I'm doing wrong?
Thanks
-Jonathan Cantrell
The problem is, GnuPG doesn't trust the key I imported so it prompts to ask me if I want to use this key even though it isn't trusted. Well, I'm not smart enough to write a script that calls gpg and then chooses 'y' when prompted. Running it with the default --yes doesn't work for this. I've done everything I can think of to get it to trust the key, but I still can't figure out how. I've edited the key, imported trust, updated trust, it still shows up as untrusted (except when I edit it, then it shows full trust).
Can anyone tell me what I'm doing wrong?
Thanks
-Jonathan Cantrell