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5<title>Email Self-Defense - a guide to fighting surveillance with GnuPG
6encryption</title>
7<meta name="keywords" content="GnuPG, GPG, openpgp, surveillance, privacy,
8email, Enigmail" />
9<meta name="description" content="Email surveillance violates our fundamental
10rights and makes free speech risky. This guide will teach you email
11self-defense in 40 minutes with GnuPG." />
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20<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ GnuPG Header and introduction text ~~~~~~~~~ -->
21<header class="row" id="header"><div>
116f80c3 22
19bce4d7 23<h1>Email Self-Defense</h1>
116f80c3 24
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43style="color: #2F5FAA;">Translate!</span></strong></a></li>
44</ul>
45
46<ul id="menu" class="os">
47<li class="spacer"><a href="index.html" class="current">GNU/Linux</a></li>
48<li><a href="mac.html">Mac OS</a></li>
49<li><a href="windows.html">Windows</a></li>
50<li><a href="workshops.html">Teach your friends</a></li>
51<li><a href="https://fsf.org/share?u=https://u.fsf.org/zb&amp;t=Email
52encryption for everyone via %40fsf">Share&nbsp;
53<img
54src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/gnu-social.png"
55class="share-logo"
56alt="[GNU Social]" />&nbsp;
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70</ul>
71
72<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ FSF Introduction ~~~~~~~~~ -->
73<div id="fsf-intro">
74
75<h3><a href="http://u.fsf.org/ys"><img
76alt="Free Software Foundation"
77src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/fsf-logo.png" />
78</a></h3>
79
80<div class="fsf-emphasis">
81
82<p>We fight for computer users' rights, and promote the development of free (as
83in freedom) software. Resisting bulk surveillance is very important to us.</p>
84
85<p><strong>Please donate to support Email Self-Defense. We need to keep
86improving it, and making more materials, for the benefit of people around
87the world taking the first step towards protecting their privacy.</strong></p>
88
89</div>
90
91<p><a
92href="https://crm.fsf.org/civicrm/contribute/transact?reset=1&amp;id=14&amp;pk_campaign=email_self_defense&amp;pk_kwd=guide_donate"><img
93alt="Donate"
94src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/donate.png" /></a></p>
95
96</div><!-- End #fsf-intro -->
97
98<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Guide Introduction ~~~~~~~~~ -->
99<div class="intro">
100
101<p><a id="infographic" href="infographic.html"><img
102src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/infographic-button.png"
103alt="View &amp; share our infographic &rarr;" /></a>
104Bulk surveillance violates our fundamental rights and makes free speech
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105risky. This guide will teach you a basic surveillance self-defense skill: email
106encryption. Once you've finished, you'll be able to send and receive emails
107that are scrambled to make sure a surveillance agent or thief intercepting
108your email can't read them. All you need is a computer with an Internet
109connection, an email account, and about forty minutes.</p>
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110
111<p>Even if you have nothing to hide, using encryption helps protect the privacy
112of people you communicate with, and makes life difficult for bulk surveillance
113systems. If you do have something important to hide, you're in good company;
114these are the same tools that whistleblowers use to protect their identities
115while shining light on human rights abuses, corruption and other crimes.</p>
116
117<p>In addition to using encryption, standing up
118to surveillance requires fighting politically for a <a
119href="http://gnu.org/philosophy/surveillance-vs-democracy.html">reduction
120in the amount of data collected on us</a>, but the essential first step is
121to protect yourself and make surveillance of your communication as difficult
122as possible. This guide helps you do that. It is designed for beginners, but
123if you already know the basics of GnuPG or are an experienced free software
124user, you'll enjoy the advanced tips and the <a href="workshops.html">guide
125to teaching your friends</a>.</p>
126
127</div><!-- End .intro -->
128</div></header><!-- End #header -->
129
130<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Section 1: Get the pieces ~~~~~~~~~ -->
131<section class="row" id="section1"><div>
132
133<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ section introduction: interspersed text ~~~~~~~~~ -->
134<div class="section-intro">
135
136<h2><em>#1</em> Get the pieces</h2>
137
138<p class="notes">This guide relies on software which is <a
139href="https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html">freely licensed</a>;
140it's completely transparent and anyone can copy it or make their
141own version. This makes it safer from surveillance than proprietary
142software (like Windows). Learn more about free software at <a
143href="https://u.fsf.org/ys">fsf.org</a>.</p>
144
145<p>Most GNU/Linux operating systems come with GnuPG installed on them,
146so you don't have to download it. Before configuring GnuPG though, you'll
147need the IceDove desktop email program installed on your computer. Most
148GNU/Linux distributions have IceDove installed already, though it may be
149under the alternate name "Thunderbird." Email programs are another way to
150access the same email accounts you can access in a browser (like Gmail),
151but provide extra features.</p>
152
153<p>If you already have an email program, you can skip to <a
154href="#step-1b">Step 1.b</a>.</p>
155
156</div><!-- End .section-intro -->
157
158<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
159<div id="step-1a" class="step">
160<div class="sidebar">
161
162<p><img
163src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/step1a-install-wizard.png"
164alt="Step 1.A: Install Wizard" /></p>
165
166</div><!-- /.sidebar -->
167<div class="main">
168
169<h3><em>Step 1.a</em> Set up your email program with your email account</h3>
170
171<p>Open your email program and follow the wizard (step-by-step walkthrough)
172that sets it up with your email account.</p>
173
174<p>Look for the letters SSL, TLS, or STARTTLS to the right of the servers
175when you're setting up your account. If you don't see them, you will still
176be able to use encryption, but this means that the people running your email
177system are running behind the industry standard in protecting your security
178and privacy. We recommend that you send them a friendly email asking them
179to enable SSL, TLS, or STARTTLS for your email server. They will know what
180you're talking about, so it's worth making the request even if you aren't
181an expert on these security systems.</p>
182
183<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
184<div class="troubleshooting">
185
186<h4>Troubleshooting</h4>
187
188<dl>
189<dt>The wizard doesn't launch</dt>
190<dd>You can launch the wizard yourself, but the menu option for doing so is
191named differently in each email program. The button to launch it will be in
192the program's main menu, under "New" or something similar, titled something
193like "Add account" or "New/Existing email account."</dd>
194
195<dt>The wizard can't find my account or isn't downloading my mail</dt>
196<dd>Before searching the Web, we recommend you start by asking other people
197who use your email system, to figure out the correct settings.</dd>
198
199<dt class="feedback">Don't see a solution to your problem?</dt>
200<dd class="feedback">Please let us know on the <a
201href="https://libreplanet.org/wiki/GPG_guide/Public_Review">feedback
202page</a>.</dd>
203</dl>
204
205</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
206</div><!-- End .main -->
207</div><!-- End #step1-a .step -->
208
209<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
210<div id="step-1b" class="step">
211<div class="sidebar">
212
213<ul class="images">
214<li><img
215src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/step1b-01-tools-addons.png"
216alt="Step 1.B: Tools -> Add-ons" /></li>
217<li><img
218src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/step1b-02-search.png"
219alt="Step 1.B: Search Add-ons" /></li>
220<li><img
221src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/step1b-03-install.png"
222alt="Step 1.B: Install Add-ons" /></li>
223</ul>
224
225</div><!-- /.sidebar -->
226<div class="main">
227
228<h3><em>Step 1.b</em> Install the Enigmail plugin for your email program</h3>
229
230<p>In your email program's menu, select Add-ons (it may be in the Tools
37f1a349 231section). Make sure Extensions is selected on the left. Do you see Enigmail? Make sure it's the latest version. If so, skip this step.</p>
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232
233<p>If not, search "Enigmail" with the search bar in the upper right. You
234can take it from here. Restart your email program when you're done.</p>
235
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236<p>There are major security flaws in versions of GnuPG prior to 2.2.8, and
237Enigmail prior to 2.0.7. Make sure you have GnuPG 2.2.8 and Enigmail 2.0.7,
238or later versions.</p>
239
240<p>Note: As of June 18, 2018, GnuPG 2.2.8 is unavailable for Debian stable and
241testing.</p>
242
ea4042b9 243
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244<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
245<div class="troubleshooting">
246
247<h4>Troubleshooting</h4>
248
249<dl>
250<dt>I can't find the menu.</dt>
251<dd>In many new email programs, the main menu is represented by an image of
252three stacked horizontal bars.</dd>
253
254<dt>My email looks weird</dt>
255<dd>Enigmail doesn't tend to play nice with HTML, which is used to format
256emails, so it may disable your HTML formatting automatically. To send an
257HTML-formatted email without encryption or a signature, hold down the Shift
258key when you select compose. You can then write an email as if Enigmail
259wasn't there.</dd>
260
261<dt class="feedback">Don't see a solution to your problem?</dt>
262<dd class="feedback">Please let us know on the <a
263href="https://libreplanet.org/wiki/GPG_guide/Public_Review">feedback
264page</a>.</dd>
265</dl>
266
267</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
268</div><!-- End .main -->
269</div><!-- End #step-1b .step -->
270</div></section><!-- End #section1 -->
271
272<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Section 2: Make your keys ~~~~~~~~~ -->
273<section class="row" id="section2"><div>
274
275<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ section introduction: interspersed text ~~~~~~~~~ -->
276<div class="section-intro">
277
278<h2><em>#2</em> Make your keys</h2>
279
280<p>To use the GnuPG system, you'll need a public key and a private key (known
281together as a keypair). Each is a long string of randomly generated numbers
282and letters that are unique to you. Your public and private keys are linked
283together by a special mathematical function.</p>
284
285<p>Your public key isn't like a physical key, because it's stored in the open
286in an online directory called a keyserver. People download it and use it,
287along with GnuPG, to encrypt emails they send to you. You can think of the
288keyserver as a phonebook; people who want to send you encrypted email can
289look up your public key.</p>
290
291<p>Your private key is more like a physical key, because you keep it to
292yourself (on your computer). You use GnuPG and your private key together to
293descramble encrypted emails other people send to you. <span style="font-weight:
294bold;">You should never share you private key with anyone, under any
295circumstances.</span></p>
296
297<p>In addition to encryption and decryption, you can also use these keys to
298sign messages and check the authenticity of other people's signatures. We'll
299discuss this more in the next section.</p>
300
301</div><!-- End .section-intro -->
302
303<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
304<div id="step-2a" class="step">
305<div class="sidebar">
306
307<p><img
308src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/step2a-01-make-keypair.png"
309alt="Step 2.A: Make a Keypair" /></p>
310
311</div><!-- /.sidebar -->
312<div class="main">
313
314<h3><em>Step 2.a</em> Make a keypair</h3>
315
316<p>The Enigmail Setup wizard may start automatically. If it doesn't, select
317Enigmail &rarr; Setup Wizard from your email program's menu. You don't need
318to read the text in the window that pops up unless you'd like to, but it's
319good to read the text on the later screens of the wizard. Click Next with
320the default options selected, except in these instances, which are listed
321in the order they appear:</p>
322
323<ul>
324<li>On the screen titled "Encryption," select "Encrypt all of my messages
325by default, because privacy is critical to me."</li>
326
327<li>On the screen titled "Signing," select "Don't sign my messages by
328default."</li>
329
330<li>On the screen titled "Key Selection," select "I want to create a new
331key pair for signing and encrypting my email."</li>
332
333<li>On the screen titled "Create Key," pick a strong password! You can
334do it manually, or you can use the Diceware method. Doing it manually
335is faster but not as secure. Using Diceware takes longer and requires
336dice, but creates a password that is much harder for attackers figure
337out. To use it, read the section "Make a secure passphrase with Diceware" in <a
338href="https://theintercept.com/2015/03/26/passphrases-can-memorize-attackers-cant-guess/">this
339article</a> by Micah Lee.</li>
340</ul>
341
342<p>If you'd like to pick a password manually, come up with something
343you can remember which is at least twelve characters long, and includes
344at least one lower case and upper case letter and at least one number or
345punctuation symbol. Never pick a password you've used elsewhere. Don't use
346any recognizable patterns, such as birthdays, telephone numbers, pets' names,
347song lyrics, quotes from books, and so on.</p>
348
349<p class="notes">The program will take a little while to finish the next
350step, the "Key Creation" screen. While you wait, do something else with your
351computer, like watching a movie or browsing the Web. The more you use the
352computer at this point, the faster the key creation will go.</p>
353
354<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">When the "Key Generation Completed" screen
355pops up, select Generate Certificate and choose to save it in a safe place on
356your computer (we recommend making a folder called "Revocation Certificate"
357in your home folder and keeping it there). This step is essential for your
358email self-defense, as you'll learn more about in <a href="#section5">Section
3595</a>.</span></p>
360
361<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
362<div class="troubleshooting">
363
364<h4>Troubleshooting</h4>
365
366<dl>
367<dt>I can't find the Enigmail menu.</dt>
368<dd>In many new email programs, the main menu is represented by an image
369of three stacked horizontal bars. Enigmail may be inside a section called
370Tools.</dd>
371
372<dt>The wizard says that it cannot find GnuPG.</dt>
373<dd>Open whatever program you usually use for installing software, and search
374for GnuPG, then install it. Then restart the Enigmail setup wizard by going
375to Enigmail &rarr; Setup Wizard.</dd>
376
377<dt>My email looks weird</dt>
378<dd>Enigmail doesn't tend to play nice with HTML, which is used to format
379emails, so it may disable your HTML formatting automatically. To send an
380HTML-formatted email without encryption or a signature, hold down the Shift
381key when you select compose. You can then write an email as if Enigmail
382wasn't there.</dd>
383
384<dt>More resources</dt>
385<dd>If you're having trouble with our
386instructions or just want to learn more, check out <a
387href="https://enigmail.wiki/Key_Management#Generating_your_own_key_pair">Enigmail's
388wiki instructions for key generation</a>.</dd>
389
390<dt class="feedback">Don't see a solution to your problem?</dt>
391<dd class="feedback">Please let us know on the <a
392href="https://libreplanet.org/wiki/GPG_guide/Public_Review">feedback
393page</a>.</dd>
394</dl>
395
396</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
397
398<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
399<div class="troubleshooting">
400
401<h4>Advanced</h4>
402
403<dl>
404<dt>Command line key generation</dt>
405<dd>If you prefer using the command line for a higher
406degree of control, you can follow the documentation from <a
407href="https://www.gnupg.org/gph/en/manual/c14.html#AEN25">The GNU Privacy
408Handbook</a>. Make sure you stick with "RSA and RSA" (the default),
409because it's newer and more secure than the algorithms the documentation
410recommends. Also make sure your key is at least 2048 bits, or 4096 if you
411want to be extra secure.</dd>
412
413<dt>Advanced key pairs</dt>
414<dd>When GnuPG creates a new keypair, it compartmentalizes
415the encryption function from the signing function through <a
416href="https://wiki.debian.org/Subkeys">subkeys</a>. If you use
417subkeys carefully, you can keep your GnuPG identity much more
418secure and recover from a compromised key much more quickly. <a
419href="https://alexcabal.com/creating-the-perfect-gpg-keypair/">Alex Cabal</a>
420and <a href="http://keyring.debian.org/creating-key.html">the Debian wiki</a>
421provide good guides for setting up a secure subkey configuration.</dd>
422</dl>
423
424</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
425</div><!-- End .main -->
426</div><!-- End #step-2a .step -->
427
428<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
429<div id="step-2b" class="step">
430<div class="main">
431
432<h3><em>Step 2.b</em> Upload your public key to a keyserver</h3>
433
434<p>In your email program's menu, select Enigmail &rarr; Key Management.</p>
435
436<p>Right click on your key and select Upload Public Keys to Keyserver. Use
437the default keyserver in the popup.</p>
438
439<p class="notes">Now someone who wants to send you an encrypted message can
440download your public key from the Internet. There are multiple keyservers
441that you can select from the menu when you upload, but they are all copies
442of each other, so it doesn't matter which one you use. However, it sometimes
443takes a few hours for them to match each other when a new key is uploaded.</p>
444
445<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
446<div class="troubleshooting">
447
448<h4>Troubleshooting</h4>
449
450<dl>
451<dt>The progress bar never finishes</dt>
452<dd>Close the upload popup, make sure you are connected to the Internet,
453and try again. If that doesn't work, try again, selecting a different
454keyserver.</dd>
455
456<dt>My key doesn't appear in the list</dt>
457<dd>Try checking "Display All Keys by Default."</dd>
458
459<dt>More documentation</dt>
460<dd>If you're having trouble with our
461instructions or just want to learn more, check out <a
462href="https://www.enigmail.net/documentation/quickstart-ch2.php#id2533620">Enigmail's
463documentation</a>.</dd>
464
465<dt class="feedback">Don't see a solution to your problem?</dt>
466<dd class="feedback">Please let us know on the <a
467href="https://libreplanet.org/wiki/GPG_guide/Public_Review">feedback
468page</a>.</dd>
469</dl>
470
471</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
472
473<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
474<div class="troubleshooting">
475
476<h4>Advanced</h4>
477
478<dl>
479<dt>Uploading a key from the command line</dt>
480<dd>You can also upload your keys to a keyserver through the <a
481href="https://www.gnupg.org/gph/en/manual/x457.html">command line</a>. <a
482href="https://sks-keyservers.net/overview-of-pools.php">The sks Web site</a>
483maintains a list of highly interconnected keyservers. You can also <a
484href="https://www.gnupg.org/gph/en/manual/x56.html#AEN64">directly export
485your key</a> as a file on your computer.</dd>
486</dl>
487
488</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
489</div><!-- End .main -->
490</div><!-- End #step-2b .step -->
491
492<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
493<div id="terminology" class="step">
494<div class="main">
495
496<h3>GnuPG, OpenPGP, what?</h3>
497
498<p>In general, the terms GnuPG, GPG, GNU Privacy Guard, OpenPGP and PGP
499are used interchangeably. Technically, OpenPGP (Pretty Good Privacy) is the
500encryption standard, and GNU Privacy Guard (often shortened to GPG or GnuPG)
501is the program that implements the standard. Enigmail is a plug-in program
502for your email program that provides an interface for GnuPG.</p>
503
504</div><!-- End .main -->
505</div><!-- End #terminology.step-->
506</div></section><!-- End #section2 -->
507
508<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Section 3: Try it out ~~~~~~~~~ -->
509<section class="row" id="section3"><div>
510
511<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ section introduction: interspersed text ~~~~~~~~~ -->
512<div class="section-intro">
513
514<h2><em>#3</em> Try it out!</h2>
515
516<p>Now you'll try a test correspondence with a computer program named Edward,
517who knows how to use encryption. Except where noted, these are the same
518steps you'd follow when corresponding with a real, live person.</p>
519
520<!-- <p>NOTE: Edward is currently having some technical difficulties, so he
521may take a long time to respond, or not respond at all. We're sorry about
522this and we're working hard to fix it. Your key will still work even without
523testing with Edward.</p> -->
524</div><!-- End .section-intro -->
525
526<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
527<div id="step-3a" class="step">
528<div class="sidebar">
529
530<p><img
531src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/section3-try-it-out.png"
532alt="Try it out." /></p>
533
534</div><!-- /.sidebar -->
535<div class="main">
536
537<h3><em>Step 3.a</em> Send Edward your public key</h3>
538
539<p>This is a special step that you won't have to do when corresponding
540with real people. In your email program's menu, go to Enigmail &rarr; Key
541Management. You should see your key in the list that pops up. Right click
542on your key and select Send Public Keys by Email. This will create a new
543draft message, as if you had just hit the Write button.</p>
544
545<p>Address the message to <a
546href="mailto:edward-en@fsf.org">edward-en@fsf.org</a>. Put at least one word
547(whatever you want) in the subject and body of the email. Don't send yet.</p>
548
549<p>The lock icon in the top left should be yellow, meaning encryption is
550turned on. We want this first special message to be unencrypted, so
551click the icon once to turn it off. The lock should become grey, with a
552blue dot on it (to alert you that the setting has been changed from the
553default). Once encryption is off, hit Send.</p>
554
555<p class="notes">It may take two or three minutes for Edward to
556respond. In the meantime, you might want to skip ahead and check out the <a
557href="#section5">Use it Well</a> section of this guide. Once he's responded,
558head to the next step. From here on, you'll be doing just the same thing as
559when corresponding with a real person.</p>
560
561<p>When you open Edward's reply, GnuPG may prompt you for your password
562before using your private key to decrypt it.</p>
563
564</div><!-- End .main -->
565</div><!-- End #step-3a .step -->
566
567<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
568<div id="step-3b" class="step">
569<div class="main">
570
571<h3><em>Step 3.b</em> Send a test encrypted email</h3>
572
573<p>Write a new email in your email program, addressed to <a
574href="mailto:edward-en@fsf.org">edward-en@fsf.org</a>. Make the subject
575"Encryption test" or something similar and write something in the body.</p>
576
577<p>The lock icon in the top left of the window should be yellow, meaning
578encryption is on. This will be your default from now on.</p>
579
580<p class="notes">Next to the lock, you'll notice an icon of a pencil. We'll
581get to this in a moment.</p>
582
583<p>Click Send. Enigmail will pop up a window that says "Recipients not valid,
584not trusted or not found."</p>
585
586<p>To encrypt an email to Edward, you need his public key, so now you'll have
587Enigmail download it from a keyserver. Click Download Missing Keys and use
588the default in the pop-up that asks you to choose a keyserver. Once it finds
589keys, check the first one (Key ID starting with C), then select ok. Select
590ok in the next pop-up.</p>
591
592<p>Now you are back at the "Recipients not valid, not trusted or not found"
593screen. Check the box in front of Edward's key and click Send.</p>
594
595<p class="notes">Since you encrypted this email with Edward's public key,
596Edward's private key is required to decrypt it. Edward is the only one with
597his private key, so no one except him can decrypt it.</p>
598
599<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
600<div class="troubleshooting">
601
602<h4>Troubleshooting</h4>
603
604<dl>
605<dt>Enigmail can't find Edward's key</dt>
606<dd>Close the pop-ups that have appeared since you clicked Send. Make sure
607you are connected to the Internet and try again. If that doesn't work, repeat
608the process, choosing a different keyserver when it asks you to pick one.</dd>
609
610<dt>Unscrambled messages in the Sent folder</dt>
611<dd>Even though you can't decrypt messages encrypted to someone else's key,
612your email program will automatically save a copy encrypted to your public key,
613which you'll be able to view from the Sent folder like a normal email. This
614is normal, and it doesn't mean that your email was not sent encrypted.</dd>
615
616<dt>More resources</dt>
617<dd>If you're still having trouble with our
618instructions or just want to learn more, check out <a
619href="https://enigmail.wiki/Signature_and_Encryption#Encrypting_a_message">Enigmail's
620wiki</a>.</dd>
621
622<dt class="feedback">Don't see a solution to your problem?</dt>
623<dd class="feedback">Please let us know on the <a
624href="https://libreplanet.org/wiki/GPG_guide/Public_Review">feedback
625page</a>.</dd>
626</dl>
627
628</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
629
630<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
631<div class="troubleshooting">
632
633<h4>Advanced</h4>
634
635<dl>
636<dt>Encrypt messages from the command line</dt>
637<dd>You can also encrypt and decrypt messages and files from the <a
638href="https://www.gnupg.org/gph/en/manual/x110.html">command line</a>,
639if that's your preference. The option --armor makes the encrypted output
640appear in the regular character set.</dd>
641</dl>
642
643</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
644</div><!-- End .main -->
645</div><!-- End #step-3b .step -->
646
647<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
648<div id="step-headers_unencrypted" class="step">
649<div class="main">
650
651<h3><em>Important:</em> Security tips</h3>
19e80165 652
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653<p>Even if you encrypt your email, the subject line is not encrypted, so
654don't put private information there. The sending and receiving addresses
655aren't encrypted either, so a surveillance system can still figure out who
656you're communicating with. Also, surveillance agents will know that you're
657using GnuPG, even if they can't figure out what you're saying. When you
658send attachments, Enigmail will give you the choice to encrypt them or not,
659independent of the actual email.</p>
bdf319c4 660
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661<p>For greater security against potential attacks, you can turn off
662HTML. Instead, you can render the message body as plain text. In order
c0c01f86 663to do this in Thunderbird, go to View &gt; Message Body As &gt; Plain
e72398d7
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664Text.</p>
665
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666</div><!-- End .main -->
667</div><!-- End #step-headers_unencrypted .step-->
d85363e7 668
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669<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
670<div id="step-3c" class="step">
671<div class="main">
672
673<h3><em>Step 3.c</em> Receive a response</h3>
674
675<p>When Edward receives your email, he will use his private key to decrypt
676it, then use your public key (which you sent him in <a href="#step-3a">Step
6773.A</a>) to encrypt his reply to you.</p>
678
679<p class="notes">It may take two or three minutes for Edward to
680respond. In the meantime, you might want to skip ahead and check out the <a
681href="#section5">Use it Well</a> section of this guide.</p>
682
683<p>When you receive Edward's email and open it, Enigmail will automatically
684detect that it is encrypted with your public key, and then it will use your
685private key to decrypt it.</p>
686
687<p>Notice the bar that Enigmail shows you above the message, with information
688about the status of Edward's key.</p>
689
690</div><!-- End .main -->
691</div><!-- End #step-3c .step -->
692
693<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
694<div id="step-3d" class="step">
695<div class="main">
696
697<h3><em>Step 3.d</em> Send a test signed email</h3>
698
699<p>GnuPG includes a way for you to sign messages and files, verifying that
700they came from you and that they weren't tampered with along the way. These
701signatures are stronger than their pen-and-paper cousins -- they're impossible
702to forge, because they're impossible to create without your private key
703(another reason to keep your private key safe).</p>
704
705<p>You can sign messages to anyone, so it's a great way to make people
706aware that you use GnuPG and that they can communicate with you securely. If
707they don't have GnuPG, they will be able to read your message and see your
708signature. If they do have GnuPG, they'll also be able to verify that your
709signature is authentic.</p>
710
711<p>To sign an email to Edward, compose any message to him and click the
712pencil icon next to the lock icon so that it turns gold. If you sign a
713message, GnuPG may ask you for your password before it sends the message,
714because it needs to unlock your private key for signing.</p>
715
716<p>With the lock and pencil icons, you can choose whether each message will
717be encrypted, signed, both, or neither.</p>
718
719</div>
720</div>
721
722<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
723<div id="step-3e" class="step">
724<div class="main">
725
726<h3><em>Step 3.e</em> Receive a response</h3>
727
728<p>When Edward receives your email, he will use your public key (which you
729sent him in <a href="#step-3a">Step 3.A</a>) to verify that your signature
730is authentic and the message you sent has not been tampered with.</p>
731
732<p class="notes">It may take two or three minutes for Edward to
733respond. In the meantime, you might want to skip ahead and check out the <a
734href="#section5">Use it Well</a> section of this guide.</p>
735
736<p>Edward's reply will arrive encrypted, because he prefers to use encryption
737whenever possible. If everything goes according to plan, it should say
738"Your signature was verified." If your test signed email was also encrypted,
739he will mention that first.</p>
740
741</div><!-- End .main -->
742</div><!-- End #step-3e .step -->
743</div></section>
744
745<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Section 4: Learn the Web of Trust ~~~~~~~~~ -->
746<section class="row" id="section4"><div>
747
748<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ section introduction: interspersed text ~~~~~~~~~ -->
749<div class="section-intro">
750
751<h2><em>#4</em> Learn the Web of Trust</h2>
752
753<p>Email encryption is a powerful technology, but it has a weakness;
754it requires a way to verify that a person's public key is actually
755theirs. Otherwise, there would be no way to stop an attacker from making
756an email address with your friend's name, creating keys to go with it and
757impersonating your friend. That's why the free software programmers that
758developed email encryption created keysigning and the Web of Trust.</p>
759
760<p>When you sign someone's key, you are publicly saying that you've verified
761that it belongs to them and not someone else.</p>
762
763<p>Signing keys and signing messages use the same type of mathematical
764operation, but they carry very different implications. It's a good practice
765to generally sign your email, but if you casually sign people's keys, you
766may accidently end up vouching for the identity of an imposter.</p>
767
768<p>People who use your public key can see who has signed it. Once you've
769used GnuPG for a long time, your key may have hundreds of signatures. You
770can consider a key to be more trustworthy if it has many signatures from
771people that you trust. The Web of Trust is a constellation of GnuPG users,
772connected to each other by chains of trust expressed through signatures.</p>
773
774</div><!-- End .section-intro -->
775
776<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
777<div id="step-4a" class="step">
778<div class="sidebar">
779
780<p><img
781src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/section4-web-of-trust.png"
782alt="Section 4: Web of Trust" /></p>
783
784</div><!-- /.sidebar -->
785<div class="main">
786
787<h3><em>Step 4.a</em> Sign a key</h3>
788
789<p>In your email program's menu, go to Enigmail &rarr; Key Management.</p>
790
791<p>Right click on Edward's public key and select Sign Key from the context
792menu.</p>
793
794<p>In the window that pops up, select "I will not answer" and click ok.</p>
795
796<p>Now you should be back at the Key Management menu. Select Keyserver &rarr;
797Upload Public Keys and hit ok.</p>
798
799<p class="notes">You've just effectively said "I trust that Edward's public
800key actually belongs to Edward." This doesn't mean much because Edward isn't
801a real person, but it's good practice.</p>
802
803<!--<div id="pgp-pathfinder">
804
805<form enctype="application/x-www-form-urlencoded" action="/mk_path.cgi"
806method="get">
807
808<p><strong>From:</strong><input type="text" placeholder="xD41A008"
809name="FROM"></p>
810
811<p><strong>To:</strong><input type="text" placeholder="50BD01x4" name="TO"></p>
812
813<p class="buttons"><input type="submit" value="trust paths" name="PATHS"><input
814type="reset" value="reset" name=".reset"></p>
815
816</form>
817
818</div>End #pgp-pathfinder -->
819</div><!-- End .main -->
820</div><!-- End #step-4a .step -->
821
822<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
823<div id="step-identify_keys" class="step">
824<div class="main">
825
826<h3>Identifying keys: Fingerprints and IDs</h3>
827
828<p>People's public keys are usually identified by their key fingerprint,
829which is a string of digits like F357AA1A5B1FA42CFD9FE52A9FF2194CC09A61E8
830(for Edward's key). You can see the fingerprint for your public key, and
831other public keys saved on your computer, by going to Enigmail &rarr; Key
832Management in your email program's menu, then right clicking on the key
833and choosing Key Properties. It's good practice to share your fingerprint
834wherever you share your email address, so that people can double-check that
835they have the correct public key when they download yours from a keyserver.</p>
836
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837<p class="notes">You may also see public keys referred to by a shorter
838key ID. This key ID is visible directly from the Key Management
839window. These eight character key IDs were previously used for
840identification, which used to be safe, but is no longer reliable. You
841need to check the full fingerprint as part of verifying you have the
842correct key for the person you are trying to contact. Spoofing, in
843which someone intentionally generates a key with a fingerprint whose
844final eight characters are the same as another, is unfortunately
845common.</p>
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846
847</div><!-- End .main -->
848</div><!-- End #step-identify_keys .step-->
849
850<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
851<div id="check-ids-before-signing" class="step">
852<div class="main">
853
854<h3><em>Important:</em> What to consider when signing keys</h3>
855
856<p>Before signing a person's key, you need to be confident that it actually
857belongs to them, and that they are who they say they are. Ideally, this
858confidence comes from having interactions and conversations with them over
859time, and witnessing interactions between them and others. Whenever signing
860a key, ask to see the full public key fingerprint, and not just the shorter
861key ID. If you feel it's important to sign the key of someone you've just
862met, also ask them to show you their government identification, and make
863sure the name on the ID matches the name on the public key. In Enigmail,
864answer honestly in the window that pops up and asks "How carefully have you
865verified that the key you are about to sign actually belongs to the person(s)
866named above?"</p>
867
868<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
869<div class="troubleshooting">
870
871<h4>Advanced</h4>
872
873<dl>
874<dt>Master the Web of Trust</dt>
875<dd>Unfortunately, trust does not spread between users the way <a
876href="http://fennetic.net/irc/finney.org/~hal/web_of_trust.html">many people
877think</a>. One of best ways to strengthen the GnuPG community is to deeply <a
878href="https://www.gnupg.org/gph/en/manual/x334.html">understand</a> the Web of
879Trust and to carefully sign as many people's keys as circumstances permit.</dd>
880
881<dt>Set ownertrust</dt>
882<dd>If you trust someone enough to validate other people's keys, you can assign
883them an ownertrust level through Enigmails's key management window. Right
884click on the other person's key, go to the "Select Owner Trust" menu option,
885select the trustlevel and click OK. Only do this once you feel you have a
886deep understanding of the Web of Trust.</dd>
887</dl>
888
889</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
890</div><!-- End .main -->
891</div><!-- End #check-ids-before-signing .step-->
892</div></section><!-- End #section4 -->
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894<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Section 5: Use it well ~~~~~~~~~ -->
895<section id="section5" class="row"><div>
896
897<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ section introduction: interspersed text ~~~~~~~~~ -->
898<div class="section-intro">
899
900<h2><em>#5</em> Use it well</h2>
901
902<p>Everyone uses GnuPG a little differently, but it's important to follow
903some basic practices to keep your email secure. Not following them, you
904risk the privacy of the people you communicate with, as well as your own,
905and damage the Web of Trust.</p>
906
907</div><!-- End .section-intro -->
908
909<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
910<div id="step-5a" class="step">
911<div class="sidebar">
912
913<p><img
914src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/section5-01-use-it-well.png"
915alt="Section 5: Use it Well (1)" /></p>
916
917</div><!-- /.sidebar -->
918<div class="main">
919
920<h3>When should I encrypt? When should I sign?</h3>
921
922<p>The more you can encrypt your messages, the better. If you only encrypt
923emails occasionally, each encrypted message could raise a red flag for
924surveillance systems. If all or most of your email is encrypted, people
925doing surveillance won't know where to start. That's not to say that only
926encrypting some of your email isn't helpful -- it's a great start and it
927makes bulk surveillance more difficult.</p>
928
929<p>Unless you don't want to reveal your own identity (which requires other
930protective measures), there's no reason not to sign every message, whether or
931not you are encrypting. In addition to allowing those with GnuPG to verify
932that the message came from you, signing is a non-intrusive way to remind
933everyone that you use GnuPG and show support for secure communication. If you
934often send signed messages to people that aren't familiar with GnuPG, it's
935nice to also include a link to this guide in your standard email signature
936(the text kind, not the cryptographic kind).</p>
937
938</div><!-- End .main -->
939</div><!-- End #step-5a .step -->
940
941<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
942<div id="step-5b" class="step">
943<div class="sidebar">
944
945<p><img
946src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/section5-02-use-it-well.png"
947alt="Section 5: Use it Well (2)" /></p>
948
949</div><!-- /.sidebar -->
950<div class="main">
951
952<h3>Be wary of invalid keys</h3>
953
954<p>GnuPG makes email safer, but it's still important to watch out for invalid
955keys, which might have fallen into the wrong hands. Email encrypted with
956invalid keys might be readable by surveillance programs.</p>
957
958<p>In your email program, go back to the first encrypted email that Edward
959sent you. Because Edward encrypted it with your public key, it will have a
960message from Enigmail at the top, which most likely says "Enigmail: Part of
961this message encrypted."</p>
962
963<p><b>When using GnuPG, make a habit of glancing at that bar. The program
4227f3fd 964will warn you there if you get an email signed with a key that can't
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965be trusted.</b></p>
966
967</div><!-- End .main -->
968</div><!-- End #step-5b .step -->
969
970<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
971<div id="step-5c" class="step">
972<div class="main">
973
974<h3>Copy your revocation certificate to somewhere safe</h3>
975
976<p>Remember when you created your keys and saved the revocation certificate
977that GnuPG made? It's time to copy that certificate onto the safest digital
978storage that you have -- the ideal thing is a flash drive, disk, or hard
979drive stored in a safe place in your home, not on a device you carry with
980you regularly.</p>
981
982<p>If your private key ever gets lost or stolen, you'll need this certificate
983file to let people know that you are no longer using that keypair.</p>
984
985</div><!-- End .main -->
986</div><!-- End #step-5c .step -->
987
988<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
989<div id="step-lost_key" class="step">
990<div class="main">
991
992<h3><em>Important:</em> act swiftly if someone gets your private key</h3>
993
994<p>If you lose your private key or someone else gets ahold
995of it (say, by stealing or cracking your computer), it's
996important to revoke it immediately before someone else uses
997it to read your encrypted email or forge your signature. This
998guide doesn't cover how to revoke a key, but you can follow these <a
999href="https://www.hackdiary.com/2004/01/18/revoking-a-gpg-key/">instructions</a>.
1000After you're done revoking, make a new key and send an email to everyone
1001with whom you usually use your key to make sure they know, including a copy
1002of your new key.</p>
1003
1004</div><!-- End .main -->
1005</div><!-- End #step-lost_key .step-->
1006
1007<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
1008<!---<div id="transfer-key" class="step">
1009<div class="main">
1010
1011<h3>Transferring you key</h3>
1012
1013<p>You can use Enigmail's <a
1014href="https://www.enigmail.net/documentation/keyman.php">key management
1015window</a> to import and export keys. If you want to be able to read
1016your encrypted email on a different computer, you will need to export
1017your secret key from here. Be warned, if you transfer the key without <a
1018href="https://help.ubuntu.com/community/EncryptedFilesystemsOnRemovableStorage">encrypting</a>
1019the drive it's on the transfer will be dramatically less secure.</p>
1020
1021</div>--><!-- End .main
1022</div> End #transfer-key .step-->
1023
1024<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
1025<div id="webmail-and-GnuPG" class="step">
1026<div class="main">
1027
1028<h3>Webmail and GnuPG</h3>
1029
1030<p>When you use a web browser to access your email, you're using webmail,
1031an email program stored on a distant website. Unlike webmail, your desktop
1032email program runs on your own computer. Although webmail can't decrypt
1033encrypted email, it will still display it in its encrypted form. If you
1034primarily use webmail, you'll know to open your email client when you receive
1035a scrambled email.</p>
1036
1037</div><!-- End .main -->
1038</div><!-- End #webmail-and-GnuPG .step-->
1039
1040<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~
1041<div id="step-5d" class="step">
1042<div class="main">
1043
1044<h3>Make your public key part of your online identity</h3>
1045
1046<p> First add your public key fingerprint to your email signature, then
1047compose an email to at least five of your friends, telling them you just
1048set up GnuPG and mentioning your public key fingerprint. Link to this guide
1049and ask them to join you. Don't forget that there's also an awesome <a
1050href="infographic.html">infographic to share.</a></p>
1051
1052<p class="notes">Start writing your public key fingerprint anywhere someone
1053would see your email address: your social media profiles, blog, Website,
1054or business card. (At the Free Software Foundation, we put ours on our
1055<a href="https://fsf.org/about/staff">staff page</a>.) We need to get our
1056culture to the point that we feel like something is missing when we see an
1057email address without a public key fingerprint.</p>
1058
1059</div>--><!-- End .main
1060</div> End #step-5d .step-->
1061</div></section><!-- End #section5 -->
1062
1063<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Section 6: Next steps ~~~~~~~~~ -->
116f80c3 1064<section class="row" id="section6">
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1065<div id="step-click_here" class="step">
1066<div class="main">
0a225228 1067
19bce4d7 1068<h2><a href="next_steps.html">Great job! Check out the next steps.</a></h2>
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1070</div><!-- End .main -->
1071</div><!-- End #step-click_here .step-->
116f80c3 1072</section><!-- End #section6 -->
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19bce4d7 1074<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ FAQ ~~~~~~~~~ -->
f44dd62f 1075<!-- When un-commenting this section go to main.css and search
116f80c3 1076for /* Guide Sections Background */ then add #faq to the desired color
19bce4d7 1077<section class="row" id="faq"><div>
116f80c3 1078<div class="sidebar">
19bce4d7 1079
116f80c3 1080<h2>FAQ</h2>
6c495e2d 1081
19bce4d7 1082</div>
116f80c3 1083<div class="main">
19bce4d7 1084
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1085<dl>
1086<dt>My key expired</dt>
1087<dd>Answer coming soon.</dd>
6c495e2d 1088
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1089<dt>Who can read encrypted messages? Who can read signed ones?</dt>
1090<dd>Answer coming soon.</dd>
6c495e2d 1091
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1092<dt>My email program is opening at times I don't want it to open/is now my
1093default program and I don't want it to be.</dt>
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1094<dd>Answer coming soon.</dd>
1095</dl>
19bce4d7 1096
116f80c3
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1097</div>
1098</div>
1099</section> --><!-- End #faq -->
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