zh-hans: update translation
[enc.git] / en / windows.html
CommitLineData
4f3e4963 1<!DOCTYPE html>
c35c9b77 2<html lang="en">
b3eff1c4 3<head>
39c89f44
TG
4<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
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." />
12<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" />
13<link rel="stylesheet" href="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/css/main.css" />
14<link rel="shortcut icon"
15href="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/favicon.ico" />
b3eff1c4 16</head>
39c89f44 17
0ff9aef3 18<body>
b3eff1c4 19
39c89f44
TG
20<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ GnuPG Header and introduction text ~~~~~~~~~ -->
21<header class="row" id="header"><div>
b3eff1c4 22
39c89f44 23<h1>Email Self-Defense</h1>
b3eff1c4 24
39c89f44
TG
25<!-- Language list for browsers that do not have JS enabled -->
26<ul id="languages" class="os">
e897555f 27<li><a class="current" href="/en">English - v4.0</a></li>
f3befb3a 28<li><a href="/ar">العربية <span class="tip">tip</span></a></li>
e897555f
TG
29<li><a href="/cs">Čeština - v4.0</a></li>
30<li><a href="/de">Deutsch - v3.0</a></li>
31<li><a href="/el">ελληνικά - v3.0</a></li>
32<li><a href="/es">español - v4.0</a></li>
33<li><a href="/fa">فارسی - v4.0</a></li>
34<li><a href="/fr">français - v4.0</a></li>
35<li><a href="/it">italiano - v3.0</a></li>
36<li><a href="/ja">日本語 - v4.0</a></li>
f3befb3a
TG
37<li><a href="/ko">한국어 <span class="tip">tip</span></a></li>
38<li><a href="/ml">മലയാളം <span class="tip">tip</span></a></li>
e897555f
TG
39<li><a href="/pt-br">português do Brasil - v3.0</a></li>
40<li><a href="/ro">română - v3.0</a></li>
41<li><a href="/ru">русский - v4.0</a></li>
5163d881 42<li><a href="/sq">Shqip - v4.0</a></li>
e897555f
TG
43<li><a href="/sv">svenska - v4.0</a></li>
44<li><a href="/tr">Türkçe - v4.0</a></li>
f3befb3a
TG
45<li><a href="/zh-hans">简体中文 <span class="tip">tip</span></a></li>
46<li><a href="https://libreplanet.org/wiki/GPG_guide/Translation_Guide"><strong><span
39c89f44
TG
47style="color: #2F5FAA;">Translate!</span></strong></a></li>
48</ul>
49
50<ul id="menu" class="os">
51<li class="spacer"><a href="index.html">GNU/Linux</a></li>
52<li><a href="mac.html">Mac OS</a></li>
53<li><a href="windows.html" class="current">Windows</a></li>
54<li><a href="workshops.html">Teach your friends</a></li>
55<li><a href="https://fsf.org/share?u=https://u.fsf.org/zb&amp;t=Email
56encryption for everyone via %40fsf">Share&nbsp;
57<img
58src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/gnu-social.png"
59class="share-logo"
60alt="[GNU Social]" />&nbsp;
61<img
62src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/pump.io.png"
63class="share-logo"
64alt="[Pump.io]" />&nbsp;
65<img
66src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/reddit-alien.png"
67class="share-logo"
68alt="[Reddit]" />&nbsp;
69<img
70src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/hacker-news.png"
71class="share-logo"
72alt="[Hacker News]" />
73</a></li>
74</ul>
75
76<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ FSF Introduction ~~~~~~~~~ -->
77<div id="fsf-intro">
78
79<h3><a href="http://u.fsf.org/ys"><img
80alt="Free Software Foundation"
81src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/fsf-logo.png" />
82</a></h3>
83
84<div class="fsf-emphasis">
85
86<p>We fight for computer users' rights, and promote the development of free (as
87in freedom) software. Resisting bulk surveillance is very important to us.</p>
88
89<p><strong>Please donate to support Email Self-Defense. We need to keep
90improving it, and making more materials, for the benefit of people around
91the world taking the first step towards protecting their privacy.</strong></p>
92
93</div>
94
95<p><a
96href="https://crm.fsf.org/civicrm/contribute/transact?reset=1&amp;id=14&amp;pk_campaign=email_self_defense&amp;pk_kwd=guide_donate"><img
97alt="Donate"
98src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/donate.png" /></a></p>
99
100</div><!-- End #fsf-intro -->
101
102<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Guide Introduction ~~~~~~~~~ -->
103<div class="intro">
104
105<p><a id="infographic" href="infographic.html"><img
106src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/infographic-button.png"
107alt="View &amp; share our infographic &rarr;" /></a>
108Bulk surveillance violates our fundamental rights and makes free speech
109risky. This guide will teach you a basic surveillance self-defense skill: email
110encryption. Once you've finished, you'll be able to send and receive emails
111that are scrambled to make sure a surveillance agent or thief intercepting
112your email can't read them. All you need is a computer with an Internet
113connection, an email account, and about forty minutes.</p>
114
115<p>Even if you have nothing to hide, using encryption helps protect the privacy
116of people you communicate with, and makes life difficult for bulk surveillance
117systems. If you do have something important to hide, you're in good company;
118these are the same tools that whistleblowers use to protect their identities
119while shining light on human rights abuses, corruption and other crimes.</p>
120
121<p>In addition to using encryption, standing up
122to surveillance requires fighting politically for a <a
123href="http://gnu.org/philosophy/surveillance-vs-democracy.html">reduction
124in the amount of data collected on us</a>, but the essential first step is
125to protect yourself and make surveillance of your communication as difficult
126as possible. This guide helps you do that. It is designed for beginners, but
127if you already know the basics of GnuPG or are an experienced free software
128user, you'll enjoy the advanced tips and the <a href="workshops.html">guide
129to teaching your friends</a>.</p>
130
131</div><!-- End .intro -->
132</div></header><!-- End #header -->
133
134<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Section 1: Get the pieces ~~~~~~~~~ -->
135<section class="row" id="section1"><div>
136
137<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ section introduction: interspersed text ~~~~~~~~~ -->
138<div class="section-intro">
139
140<h2><em>#1</em> Get the pieces</h2>
141
142<p class="notes">This guide relies on software which is <a
143href="https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html">freely licensed</a>; it's
144completely transparent and anyone can copy it or make their own version. This
145makes it safer from surveillance than proprietary software (like Windows). To
146defend your freedom as well as protect yourself from surveillance, we recommend
147you switch to a free software operating system like GNU/Linux. Learn more
148about free software at <a href="https://u.fsf.org/ys">fsf.org</a>.</p>
149
150<p>To get started, you'll need the IceDove desktop email program installed
151on your computer. For your system, IceDove may be known by the alternate name
152"Thunderbird." Email programs are another way to access the same email accounts
153you can access in a browser (like Gmail), but provide extra features.</p>
154
155<p>If you already have an email program, you can skip to <a
156href="#step-1b">Step 1.b</a>.</p>
157
158</div><!-- End .section-intro -->
159
160<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
161<div id="step-1a" class="step">
162<div class="sidebar">
163
164<p><img
165src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/step1a-install-wizard.png"
166alt="Step 1.A: Install Wizard" /></p>
167
168</div><!-- /.sidebar -->
169<div class="main">
170
171<h3><em>Step 1.a</em> Set up your email program with your email account</h3>
172
173<p>Open your email program and follow the wizard (step-by-step walkthrough)
174that sets it up with your email account.</p>
175
176<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
177<div class="troubleshooting">
178
179<h4>Troubleshooting</h4>
180
181<dl>
182<dt>The wizard doesn't launch</dt>
183<dd>You can launch the wizard yourself, but the menu option for doing so is
184named differently in each email programs. The button to launch it will be in
185the program's main menu, under "New" or something similar, titled something
186like "Add account" or "New/Existing email account."</dd>
187
188<dt>The wizard can't find my account or isn't downloading my mail</dt>
189<dd>Before searching the Web, we recommend you start by asking other people
190who use your email system, to figure out the correct settings.</dd>
191
192<dt class="feedback">Don't see a solution to your problem?</dt>
193<dd class="feedback">Please let us know on the <a
194href="https://libreplanet.org/wiki/GPG_guide/Public_Review">feedback
195page</a>.</dd>
196</dl>
197
198</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
199</div><!-- End .main -->
200</div><!-- End #step1-a .step -->
201
202<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
203<div id="step-1b" class="step">
204<div class="main">
205
206<h3><em>Step 1.b</em> Get GnuPG by downloading GPG4Win</h3>
207
208<p>GPG4Win is a software package that includes GnuPG. <a
209href="https://www.gpg4win.org/">Download</a> and install it, choosing default
210options whenever asked. After it's installed, you can close any windows that
211it creates.</p>
212
5c3bffbe
TG
213<p>There are major security flaws in versions of GnuPG provided by GPG4Win
214prior to 3.1.2. Make sure you have GPG4Win 3.1.2 or later.</p>
2d0627cb 215
39c89f44
TG
216</div><!-- End .main -->
217</div><!-- End #step1-b .step -->
218
219<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
220<div id="step-1c" class="step">
221<div class="sidebar">
222
223<ul class="images">
224<li><img
225src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/step1b-01-tools-addons.png"
226alt="Step 1.C: Tools -> Add-ons" /></li>
227<li><img
228src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/step1b-02-search.png"
229alt="Step 1.C: Search Add-ons" /></li>
230<li><img
231src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/step1b-03-install.png"
232alt="Step 1.C: Install Add-ons" /></li>
233</ul>
234
235</div><!-- /.sidebar -->
236<div class="main">
237
238<h3><em>Step 1.c</em> Install the Enigmail plugin for your email program</h3>
239
240<p>In your email program's menu, select Add-ons (it may be in the Tools
704dbcd7 241section). 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>
39c89f44
TG
242
243<p>If not, search "Enigmail" with the search bar in the upper right. You
244can take it from here. Restart your email program when you're done.</p>
245
5c3bffbe
TG
246<p>There are major security flaws in Enigmail prior to version 2.0.7. Make
247sure you have Enigmail 2.0.7 or later.</p>
6972a1ca 248
39c89f44
TG
249<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
250<div class="troubleshooting">
251
252<h4>Troubleshooting</h4>
253
254<dl>
255<dt>I can't find the menu.</dt>
256<dd>In many new email programs, the main menu is represented by an image of
257three stacked horizontal bars.</dd>
258
259<dt class="feedback">Don't see a solution to your problem?</dt>
260<dd class="feedback">Please let us know on the <a
261href="https://libreplanet.org/wiki/GPG_guide/Public_Review">feedback
262page</a>.</dd>
263</dl>
264
265</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
266</div><!-- End .main -->
267</div><!-- End #step-1c .step -->
268</div></section><!-- End #section1 -->
269
270<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Section 2: Make your keys ~~~~~~~~~ -->
271<section class="row" id="section2"><div>
272
273<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ section introduction: interspersed text ~~~~~~~~~ -->
274<div class="section-intro">
275
276<h2><em>#2</em> Make your keys</h2>
277
278<p>To use the GnuPG system, you'll need a public key and a private key (known
279together as a keypair). Each is a long string of randomly generated numbers
280and letters that are unique to you. Your public and private keys are linked
281together by a special mathematical function.</p>
282
283<p>Your public key isn't like a physical key, because it's stored in the open
284in an online directory called a keyserver. People download it and use it,
285along with GnuPG, to encrypt emails they send to you. You can think of the
286keyserver as a phonebook; people who want to send you encrypted email can
287look up your public key.</p>
288
289<p>Your private key is more like a physical key, because you keep it to
290yourself (on your computer). You use GnuPG and your private key together to
291descramble encrypted emails other people send to you. <span style="font-weight:
292bold;">You should never share you private key with anyone, under any
293circumstances.</span></p>
294
295<p>In addition to encryption and decryption, you can also use these keys to
296sign messages and check the authenticity of other people's signatures. We'll
297discuss this more in the next section.</p>
298
299</div><!-- End .section-intro -->
300
301<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
302<div id="step-2a" class="step">
303<div class="sidebar">
304
305<p><img
306src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/step2a-01-make-keypair.png"
307alt="Step 2.A: Make a Keypair" /></p>
308
309</div><!-- /.sidebar -->
310<div class="main">
311
312<h3><em>Step 2.a</em> Make a keypair</h3>
313
314<p>The Enigmail Setup wizard may start automatically. If it doesn't, select
315Enigmail &rarr; Setup Wizard from your email program's menu. You don't need
316to read the text in the window that pops up unless you'd like to, but it's
317good to read the text on the later screens of the wizard. Click Next with
318the default options selected, except in these instances, which are listed
319in the order they appear:</p>
320
321<ul>
322<li>On the screen titled "Encryption," select "Encrypt all of my messages
323by default, because privacy is critical to me."</li>
324
325<li>On the screen titled "Signing," select "Don't sign my messages by
326default."</li>
327
328<li>On the screen titled "Key Selection," select "I want to create a new
329key pair for signing and encrypting my email."</li>
330
331<li>On the screen titled "Create Key," pick a strong password! You can
332do it manually, or you can use the Diceware method. Doing it manually
333is faster but not as secure. Using Diceware takes longer and requires
334dice, but creates a password that is much harder for attackers figure
335out. To use it, read the section "Make a secure passphrase with Diceware" in <a
336href="https://theintercept.com/2015/03/26/passphrases-can-memorize-attackers-cant-guess/">this
337article</a> by Micah Lee.</li>
338</ul>
339
340<p>If you'd like to pick a password manually, come up with something
341you can remember which is at least twelve characters long, and includes
342at least one lower case and upper case letter and at least one number or
343punctuation symbol. Never pick a password you've used elsewhere. Don't use
344any recognizable patterns, such as birthdays, telephone numbers, pets' names,
345song lyrics, quotes from books, and so on.</p>
346
347<p class="notes">The program will take a little while to finish the next
348step, the "Key Creation" screen. While you wait, do something else with your
349computer, like watching a movie or browsing the Web. The more you use the
350computer at this point, the faster the key creation will go.</p>
351
352<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">When the "Key Generation Completed" screen
353pops up, select Generate Certificate and choose to save it in a safe place on
354your computer (we recommend making a folder called "Revocation Certificate"
355in your home folder and keeping it there). This step is essential for your
356email self-defense, as you'll learn more about in <a href="#section5">Section
3575</a>.</span></p>
358
359<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
360<div class="troubleshooting">
361
362<h4>Troubleshooting</h4>
363
364<dl>
365<dt>I can't find the Enigmail menu.</dt>
366<dd>In many new email programs, the main menu is represented by an image
367of three stacked horizontal bars. Enigmail may be inside a section called
368Tools.</dd>
369
370<dt>More resources</dt>
371<dd>If you're having trouble with our
372instructions or just want to learn more, check out <a
373href="https://enigmail.wiki/Key_Management#Generating_your_own_key_pair">Enigmail's
374wiki instructions for key generation</a>.</dd>
375
376<dt>My email looks weird</dt>
377<dd>Enigmail doesn't tend to play nice with HTML, which is used to format
378emails, so it may disable your HTML formatting automatically. To send an
379HTML-formatted email without encryption or a signature, hold down the Shift
380key when you select compose. You can then write an email as if Enigmail
381wasn't there.</dd>
382
383<dt class="feedback">Don't see a solution to your problem?</dt>
384<dd class="feedback">Please let us know on the <a
385href="https://libreplanet.org/wiki/GPG_guide/Public_Review">feedback
386page</a>.</dd>
387</dl>
388
389</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
390
391<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
392<div class="troubleshooting">
393
394<h4>Advanced</h4>
395
396<dl>
397<dt>Command line key generation</dt>
398<dd>If you prefer using the command line for a higher
399degree of control, you can follow the documentation from <a
400href="https://www.gnupg.org/gph/en/manual/c14.html#AEN25">The GNU Privacy
401Handbook</a>. Make sure you stick with "RSA and RSA" (the default),
402because it's newer and more secure than the algorithms the documentation
403recommends. Also make sure your key is at least 2048 bits, or 4096 if you
404want to be extra secure.</dd>
405
406<dt>Advanced key pairs</dt>
407<dd>When GnuPG creates a new keypair, it compartmentalizes
408the encryption function from the signing function through <a
409href="https://wiki.debian.org/Subkeys">subkeys</a>. If you use
410subkeys carefully, you can keep your GnuPG identity much more
411secure and recover from a compromised key much more quickly. <a
412href="https://alexcabal.com/creating-the-perfect-gpg-keypair/">Alex Cabal</a>
413and <a href="http://keyring.debian.org/creating-key.html">the Debian wiki</a>
414provide good guides for setting up a secure subkey configuration.</dd>
415</dl>
416
417</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
418</div><!-- End .main -->
419</div><!-- End #step-2a .step -->
420
421<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
422<div id="step-2b" class="step">
423<div class="main">
424
425<h3><em>Step 2.b</em> Upload your public key to a keyserver</h3>
426
427<p>In your email program's menu, select Enigmail &rarr; Key Management.</p>
428
429<p>Right click on your key and select Upload Public Keys to Keyserver. Use
430the default keyserver in the popup.</p>
431
432<p class="notes">Now someone who wants to send you an encrypted message can
433download your public key from the Internet. There are multiple keyservers
434that you can select from the menu when you upload, but they are all copies
435of each other, so it doesn't matter which one you use. However, it sometimes
436takes a few hours for them to match each other when a new key is uploaded.</p>
437
438<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
439<div class="troubleshooting">
440
441<h4>Troubleshooting</h4>
442
443<dl>
444<dt>The progress bar never finishes</dt>
445<dd>Close the upload popup, make sure you are connected to the Internet,
446and try again. If that doesn't work, try again, selecting a different
447keyserver.</dd>
448
449<dt>My key doesn't appear in the list</dt>
450<dd>Try checking "Display All Keys by Default."</dd>
451
452<dt>More documentation</dt>
453<dd>If you're having trouble with our
454instructions or just want to learn more, check out <a
455href="https://www.enigmail.net/documentation/quickstart-ch2.php#id2533620">Enigmail's
456documentation</a>.</dd>
457
458<dt class="feedback">Don't see a solution to your problem?</dt>
459<dd class="feedback">Please let us know on the <a
460href="https://libreplanet.org/wiki/GPG_guide/Public_Review">feedback
461page</a>.</dd>
462</dl>
463
464</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
465
466<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
467<div class="troubleshooting">
468
469<h4>Advanced</h4>
470
471<dl>
472<dt>Uploading a key from the command line</dt>
473<dd>You can also upload your keys to a keyserver through the <a
474href="https://www.gnupg.org/gph/en/manual/x457.html">command line</a>. <a
475href="https://sks-keyservers.net/overview-of-pools.php">The sks Web site</a>
476maintains a list of highly interconnected keyservers. You can also <a
477href="https://www.gnupg.org/gph/en/manual/x56.html#AEN64">directly export
478your key</a> as a file on your computer.</dd>
479</dl>
480
481</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
482</div><!-- End .main -->
483</div><!-- End #step-2b .step -->
484
485<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
486<div id="terminology" class="step">
487<div class="main">
488
489<h3>GnuPG, OpenPGP, what?</h3>
490
491<p>In general, the terms GnuPG, GPG, GNU Privacy Guard, OpenPGP and PGP
492are used interchangeably. Technically, OpenPGP (Pretty Good Privacy) is the
493encryption standard, and GNU Privacy Guard (often shortened to GPG or GnuPG)
494is the program that implements the standard. Enigmail is a plug-in program
495for your email program that provides an interface for GnuPG.</p>
496
497</div><!-- End .main -->
498</div><!-- End #terminology.step-->
499</div></section><!-- End #section2 -->
500
501<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Section 3: Try it out ~~~~~~~~~ -->
502<section class="row" id="section3"><div>
503
504<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ section introduction: interspersed text ~~~~~~~~~ -->
505<div class="section-intro">
506
507<h2><em>#3</em> Try it out!</h2>
508
509<p>Now you'll try a test correspondence with a computer program named Edward,
510who knows how to use encryption. Except where noted, these are the same
511steps you'd follow when corresponding with a real, live person.</p>
512
513<!-- <p>NOTE: Edward is currently having some technical difficulties, so he
514may take a long time to respond, or not respond at all. We're sorry about
515this and we're working hard to fix it. Your key will still work even without
516testing with Edward.</p> -->
517</div><!-- End .section-intro -->
518
519<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
520<div id="step-3a" class="step">
521<div class="sidebar">
522
523<p><img
524src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/section3-try-it-out.png"
525alt="Try it out." /></p>
526
527</div><!-- /.sidebar -->
528<div class="main">
529
530<h3><em>Step 3.a</em> Send Edward your public key</h3>
531
532<p>This is a special step that you won't have to do when corresponding
533with real people. In your email program's menu, go to Enigmail &rarr; Key
534Management. You should see your key in the list that pops up. Right click
535on your key and select Send Public Keys by Email. This will create a new
536draft message, as if you had just hit the Write button.</p>
537
538<p>Address the message to <a
539href="mailto:edward-en@fsf.org">edward-en@fsf.org</a>. Put at least one word
540(whatever you want) in the subject and body of the email. Don't send yet.</p>
541
542<p>The lock icon in the top left should be yellow, meaning encryption is
543turned on. We want this first special message to be unencrypted, so
544click the icon once to turn it off. The lock should become grey, with a
545blue dot on it (to alert you that the setting has been changed from the
546default). Once encryption is off, hit Send.</p>
547
548<p class="notes">It may take two or three minutes for Edward to
549respond. In the meantime, you might want to skip ahead and check out the <a
550href="#section5">Use it Well</a> section of this guide. Once he's responded,
551head to the next step. From here on, you'll be doing just the same thing as
552when corresponding with a real person.</p>
553
554<p>When you open Edward's reply, GnuPG may prompt you for your password
555before using your private key to decrypt it.</p>
556
557</div><!-- End .main -->
558</div><!-- End #step-3a .step -->
559
560<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
561<div id="step-3b" class="step">
562<div class="main">
563
564<h3><em>Step 3.b</em> Send a test encrypted email</h3>
565
566<p>Write a new email in your email program, addressed to <a
567href="mailto:edward-en@fsf.org">edward-en@fsf.org</a>. Make the subject
568"Encryption test" or something similar and write something in the body.</p>
569
570<p>The lock icon in the top left of the window should be yellow, meaning
571encryption is on. This will be your default from now on.</p>
572
573<p class="notes">Next to the lock, you'll notice an icon of a pencil. We'll
574get to this in a moment.</p>
575
576<p>Click Send. Enigmail will pop up a window that says "Recipients not valid,
577not trusted or not found."</p>
578
579<p>To encrypt an email to Edward, you need his public key, so now you'll have
580Enigmail download it from a keyserver. Click Download Missing Keys and use
581the default in the pop-up that asks you to choose a keyserver. Once it finds
582keys, check the first one (Key ID starting with C), then select ok. Select
583ok in the next pop-up.</p>
584
585<p>Now you are back at the "Recipients not valid, not trusted or not found"
586screen. Check the box in front of Edward's key and click Send.</p>
587
588<p class="notes">Since you encrypted this email with Edward's public key,
589Edward's private key is required to decrypt it. Edward is the only one with
590his private key, so no one except him can decrypt it.</p>
591
592<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
593<div class="troubleshooting">
594
595<h4>Troubleshooting</h4>
596
597<dl>
598<dt>Enigmail can't find Edward's key</dt>
599<dd>Close the pop-ups that have appeared since you clicked Send. Make sure
600you are connected to the Internet and try again. If that doesn't work, repeat
601the process, choosing a different keyserver when it asks you to pick one.</dd>
602
603<dt>Unscrambled messages in the Sent folder</dt>
604<dd>Even though you can't decrypt messages encrypted to someone else's key,
605your email program will automatically save a copy encrypted to your public key,
606which you'll be able to view from the Sent folder like a normal email. This
607is normal, and it doesn't mean that your email was not sent encrypted.</dd>
608
609<dt>More resources</dt>
610<dd>If you're still having trouble with our
611instructions or just want to learn more, check out <a
612href="https://enigmail.wiki/Signature_and_Encryption#Encrypting_a_message">Enigmail's
613wiki</a>.</dd>
614
615<dt class="feedback">Don't see a solution to your problem?</dt>
616<dd class="feedback">Please let us know on the <a
617href="https://libreplanet.org/wiki/GPG_guide/Public_Review">feedback
618page</a>.</dd>
619</dl>
620
621</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
622
623<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
624<div class="troubleshooting">
625
626<h4>Advanced</h4>
627
628<dl>
629<dt>Encrypt messages from the command line</dt>
630<dd>You can also encrypt and decrypt messages and files from the <a
631href="https://www.gnupg.org/gph/en/manual/x110.html">command line</a>,
632if that's your preference. The option --armor makes the encrypted output
633appear in the regular character set.</dd>
634</dl>
635
636</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
637</div><!-- End .main -->
638</div><!-- End #step-3b .step -->
639
640<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
641<div id="step-headers_unencrypted" class="step">
642<div class="main">
643
644<h3><em>Important:</em> Security tips</h3>
645
646<p>Even if you encrypt your email, the subject line is not encrypted, so
647don't put private information there. The sending and receiving addresses
648aren't encrypted either, so a surveillance system can still figure out who
649you're communicating with. Also, surveillance agents will know that you're
650using GnuPG, even if they can't figure out what you're saying. When you
651send attachments, Enigmail will give you the choice to encrypt them or not,
652independent of the actual email.</p>
653
6972a1ca
MB
654<p>For greater security against potential attacks, you can turn off
655HTML. Instead, you can render the message body as plain text.</p>
656
39c89f44
TG
657</div><!-- End .main -->
658</div><!-- End #step-headers_unencrypted .step-->
659
660<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
661<div id="step-3c" class="step">
662<div class="main">
663
664<h3><em>Step 3.c</em> Receive a response</h3>
665
666<p>When Edward receives your email, he will use his private key to decrypt
667it, then use your public key (which you sent him in <a href="#step-3a">Step
6683.A</a>) to encrypt his reply to you.</p>
669
670<p class="notes">It may take two or three minutes for Edward to
671respond. In the meantime, you might want to skip ahead and check out the <a
672href="#section5">Use it Well</a> section of this guide.</p>
673
674<p>When you receive Edward's email and open it, Enigmail will automatically
675detect that it is encrypted with your public key, and then it will use your
676private key to decrypt it.</p>
677
678<p>Notice the bar that Enigmail shows you above the message, with information
679about the status of Edward's key.</p>
680
681</div><!-- End .main -->
682</div><!-- End #step-3c .step -->
683
684<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
685<div id="step-3d" class="step">
686<div class="main">
687
688<h3><em>Step 3.d</em> Send a test signed email</h3>
689
690<p>GnuPG includes a way for you to sign messages and files, verifying that
691they came from you and that they weren't tampered with along the way. These
692signatures are stronger than their pen-and-paper cousins -- they're impossible
693to forge, because they're impossible to create without your private key
694(another reason to keep your private key safe).</p>
695
696<p>You can sign messages to anyone, so it's a great way to make people
697aware that you use GnuPG and that they can communicate with you securely. If
698they don't have GnuPG, they will be able to read your message and see your
699signature. If they do have GnuPG, they'll also be able to verify that your
700signature is authentic.</p>
701
702<p>To sign an email to Edward, compose any message to him and click the
703pencil icon next to the lock icon so that it turns gold. If you sign a
704message, GnuPG may ask you for your password before it sends the message,
705because it needs to unlock your private key for signing.</p>
706
707<p>With the lock and pencil icons, you can choose whether each message will
708be encrypted, signed, both, or neither.</p>
709
710</div>
711</div>
712
713<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
714<div id="step-3e" class="step">
715<div class="main">
716
717<h3><em>Step 3.e</em> Receive a response</h3>
718
719<p>When Edward receives your email, he will use your public key (which you
720sent him in <a href="#step-3a">Step 3.A</a>) to verify that your signature
721is authentic and the message you sent has not been tampered with.</p>
722
723<p class="notes">It may take two or three minutes for Edward to
724respond. In the meantime, you might want to skip ahead and check out the <a
725href="#section5">Use it Well</a> section of this guide.</p>
726
727<p>Edward's reply will arrive encrypted, because he prefers to use encryption
728whenever possible. If everything goes according to plan, it should say
729"Your signature was verified." If your test signed email was also encrypted,
730he will mention that first.</p>
731
732</div><!-- End .main -->
733</div><!-- End #step-3e .step -->
734</div></section>
735
736<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Section 4: Learn the Web of Trust ~~~~~~~~~ -->
737<section class="row" id="section4"><div>
738
739<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ section introduction: interspersed text ~~~~~~~~~ -->
740<div class="section-intro">
741
742<h2><em>#4</em> Learn the Web of Trust</h2>
4f3e4963 743
39c89f44
TG
744<p>Email encryption is a powerful technology, but it has a weakness;
745it requires a way to verify that a person's public key is actually
746theirs. Otherwise, there would be no way to stop an attacker from making
747an email address with your friend's name, creating keys to go with it and
748impersonating your friend. That's why the free software programmers that
749developed email encryption created keysigning and the Web of Trust.</p>
4f3e4963 750
39c89f44
TG
751<p>When you sign someone's key, you are publicly saying that you've verified
752that it belongs to them and not someone else.</p>
4f3e4963 753
39c89f44
TG
754<p>Signing keys and signing messages use the same type of mathematical
755operation, but they carry very different implications. It's a good practice
756to generally sign your email, but if you casually sign people's keys, you
757may accidently end up vouching for the identity of an imposter.</p>
758
759<p>People who use your public key can see who has signed it. Once you've
760used GnuPG for a long time, your key may have hundreds of signatures. You
761can consider a key to be more trustworthy if it has many signatures from
762people that you trust. The Web of Trust is a constellation of GnuPG users,
763connected to each other by chains of trust expressed through signatures.</p>
764
765</div><!-- End .section-intro -->
766
767<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
768<div id="step-4a" class="step">
769<div class="sidebar">
770
771<p><img
772src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/section4-web-of-trust.png"
773alt="Section 4: Web of Trust" /></p>
774
775</div><!-- /.sidebar -->
776<div class="main">
777
778<h3><em>Step 4.a</em> Sign a key</h3>
779
780<p>In your email program's menu, go to Enigmail &rarr; Key Management.</p>
781
782<p>Right click on Edward's public key and select Sign Key from the context
783menu.</p>
784
785<p>In the window that pops up, select "I will not answer" and click ok.</p>
786
787<p>Now you should be back at the Key Management menu. Select Keyserver &rarr;
788Upload Public Keys and hit ok.</p>
789
790<p class="notes">You've just effectively said "I trust that Edward's public
791key actually belongs to Edward." This doesn't mean much because Edward isn't
792a real person, but it's good practice.</p>
793
794<!--<div id="pgp-pathfinder">
795
796<form enctype="application/x-www-form-urlencoded" action="/mk_path.cgi"
797method="get">
798
799<p><strong>From:</strong><input type="text" placeholder="xD41A008"
800name="FROM"></p>
801
802<p><strong>To:</strong><input type="text" placeholder="50BD01x4" name="TO"></p>
803
804<p class="buttons"><input type="submit" value="trust paths" name="PATHS"><input
805type="reset" value="reset" name=".reset"></p>
806
807</form>
808
809</div>End #pgp-pathfinder -->
810</div><!-- End .main -->
811</div><!-- End #step-4a .step -->
812
813<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
814<div id="step-identify_keys" class="step">
815<div class="main">
816
817<h3>Identifying keys: Fingerprints and IDs</h3>
818
129ed1e3 819
39c89f44
TG
820<p>People's public keys are usually identified by their key fingerprint,
821which is a string of digits like F357AA1A5B1FA42CFD9FE52A9FF2194CC09A61E8
822(for Edward's key). You can see the fingerprint for your public key, and
823other public keys saved on your computer, by going to Enigmail &rarr; Key
824Management in your email program's menu, then right clicking on the key
825and choosing Key Properties. It's good practice to share your fingerprint
826wherever you share your email address, so that people can double-check that
827they have the correct public key when they download yours from a keyserver.</p>
828
129ed1e3
MB
829<p class="notes">You may also see public keys referred to by a shorter
830key ID. This key ID is visible directly from the Key Management
831window. These eight character key IDs were previously used for
832identification, which used to be safe, but is no longer reliable. You
833need to check the full fingerprint as part of verifying you have the
834correct key for the person you are trying to contact. Spoofing, in
835which someone intentionally generates a key with a fingerprint whose
836final eight characters are the same as another, is unfortunately
837common.</p>
39c89f44
TG
838
839</div><!-- End .main -->
840</div><!-- End #step-identify_keys .step-->
841
842<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
843<div id="check-ids-before-signing" class="step">
844<div class="main">
845
846<h3><em>Important:</em> What to consider when signing keys</h3>
847
848<p>Before signing a person's key, you need to be confident that it actually
849belongs to them, and that they are who they say they are. Ideally, this
850confidence comes from having interactions and conversations with them over
851time, and witnessing interactions between them and others. Whenever signing
852a key, ask to see the full public key fingerprint, and not just the shorter
853key ID. If you feel it's important to sign the key of someone you've just
854met, also ask them to show you their government identification, and make
855sure the name on the ID matches the name on the public key. In Enigmail,
856answer honestly in the window that pops up and asks "How carefully have you
857verified that the key you are about to sign actually belongs to the person(s)
858named above?"</p>
859
860<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Troubleshooting ~~~~~~~~~ -->
861<div class="troubleshooting">
862
863<h4>Advanced</h4>
864
865<dl>
866<dt>Master the Web of Trust</dt>
867<dd>Unfortunately, trust does not spread between users the way <a
868href="http://fennetic.net/irc/finney.org/~hal/web_of_trust.html">many people
869think</a>. One of best ways to strengthen the GnuPG community is to deeply <a
870href="https://www.gnupg.org/gph/en/manual/x334.html">understand</a> the Web of
871Trust and to carefully sign as many people's keys as circumstances permit.</dd>
872
873<dt>Set ownertrust</dt>
874<dd>If you trust someone enough to validate other people's keys, you can assign
875them an ownertrust level through Enigmails's key management window. Right
876click on the other person's key, go to the "Select Owner Trust" menu option,
877select the trustlevel and click OK. Only do this once you feel you have a
878deep understanding of the Web of Trust.</dd>
879</dl>
2b82530f 880
39c89f44
TG
881</div><!-- /.troubleshooting -->
882</div><!-- End .main -->
883</div><!-- End #check-ids-before-signing .step-->
884</div></section><!-- End #section4 -->
885
886<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Section 5: Use it well ~~~~~~~~~ -->
887<section id="section5" class="row"><div>
888
889<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ section introduction: interspersed text ~~~~~~~~~ -->
890<div class="section-intro">
891
892<h2><em>#5</em> Use it well</h2>
893
894<p>Everyone uses GnuPG a little differently, but it's important to follow
895some basic practices to keep your email secure. Not following them, you
896risk the privacy of the people you communicate with, as well as your own,
897and damage the Web of Trust.</p>
898
899</div><!-- End .section-intro -->
900
901<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
902<div id="step-5a" class="step">
903<div class="sidebar">
904
905<p><img
906src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/section5-01-use-it-well.png"
907alt="Section 5: Use it Well (1)" /></p>
908
909</div><!-- /.sidebar -->
910<div class="main">
911
912<h3>When should I encrypt? When should I sign?</h3>
913
914<p>The more you can encrypt your messages, the better. If you only encrypt
915emails occasionally, each encrypted message could raise a red flag for
916surveillance systems. If all or most of your email is encrypted, people
917doing surveillance won't know where to start. That's not to say that only
918encrypting some of your email isn't helpful -- it's a great start and it
919makes bulk surveillance more difficult.</p>
920
921<p>Unless you don't want to reveal your own identity (which requires other
922protective measures), there's no reason not to sign every message, whether or
923not you are encrypting. In addition to allowing those with GnuPG to verify
924that the message came from you, signing is a non-intrusive way to remind
925everyone that you use GnuPG and show support for secure communication. If you
926often send signed messages to people that aren't familiar with GnuPG, it's
927nice to also include a link to this guide in your standard email signature
928(the text kind, not the cryptographic kind).</p>
929
930</div><!-- End .main -->
931</div><!-- End #step-5a .step -->
932
933<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
934<div id="step-5b" class="step">
935<div class="sidebar">
936
937<p><img
938src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/en/screenshots/section5-02-use-it-well.png"
939alt="Section 5: Use it Well (2)" /></p>
940
941</div><!-- /.sidebar -->
942<div class="main">
943
944<h3>Be wary of invalid keys</h3>
945
946<p>GnuPG makes email safer, but it's still important to watch out for invalid
947keys, which might have fallen into the wrong hands. Email encrypted with
948invalid keys might be readable by surveillance programs.</p>
949
950<p>In your email program, go back to the first encrypted email that Edward
951sent you. Because Edward encrypted it with your public key, it will have a
952message from Enigmail at the top, which most likely says "Enigmail: Part of
953this message encrypted."</p>
954
955<p><b>When using GnuPG, make a habit of glancing at that bar. The program
0f3c2a99 956will warn you there if you get an email signed with a key that can't
39c89f44
TG
957be trusted.</b></p>
958
959</div><!-- End .main -->
960</div><!-- End #step-5b .step -->
961
962<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
963<div id="step-5c" class="step">
964<div class="main">
965
966<h3>Copy your revocation certificate to somewhere safe</h3>
967
968<p>Remember when you created your keys and saved the revocation certificate
969that GnuPG made? It's time to copy that certificate onto the safest digital
970storage that you have -- the ideal thing is a flash drive, disk, or hard
971drive stored in a safe place in your home, not on a device you carry with
972you regularly.</p>
973
974<p>If your private key ever gets lost or stolen, you'll need this certificate
975file to let people know that you are no longer using that keypair.</p>
976
977</div><!-- End .main -->
978</div><!-- End #step-5c .step -->
979
980<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
981<div id="step-lost_key" class="step">
982<div class="main">
983
984<h3><em>Important:</em> act swiftly if someone gets your private key</h3>
985
986<p>If you lose your private key or someone else gets ahold
987of it (say, by stealing or cracking your computer), it's
988important to revoke it immediately before someone else uses
989it to read your encrypted email or forge your signature. This
990guide doesn't cover how to revoke a key, but you can follow these <a
991href="https://www.hackdiary.com/2004/01/18/revoking-a-gpg-key/">instructions</a>.
992After you're done revoking, make a new key and send an email to everyone
993with whom you usually use your key to make sure they know, including a copy
994of your new key.</p>
995
996</div><!-- End .main -->
997</div><!-- End #step-lost_key .step-->
998
999<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
1000<!---<div id="transfer-key" class="step">
1001<div class="main">
1002
1003<h3>Transferring you key</h3>
1004
1005<p>You can use Enigmail's <a
1006href="https://www.enigmail.net/documentation/keyman.php">key management
1007window</a> to import and export keys. If you want to be able to read
1008your encrypted email on a different computer, you will need to export
1009your secret key from here. Be warned, if you transfer the key without <a
1010href="https://help.ubuntu.com/community/EncryptedFilesystemsOnRemovableStorage">encrypting</a>
1011the drive it's on the transfer will be dramatically less secure.</p>
1012
1013</div>--><!-- End .main
1014</div> End #transfer-key .step-->
1015
1016<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~ -->
1017<div id="webmail-and-GnuPG" class="step">
1018<div class="main">
1019
1020<h3>Webmail and GnuPG</h3>
1021
1022<p>When you use a web browser to access your email, you're using webmail,
1023an email program stored on a distant website. Unlike webmail, your desktop
1024email program runs on your own computer. Although webmail can't decrypt
1025encrypted email, it will still display it in its encrypted form. If you
1026primarily use webmail, you'll know to open your email client when you receive
1027a scrambled email.</p>
1028
1029</div><!-- End .main -->
1030</div><!-- End #webmail-and-GnuPG .step-->
1031
1032<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ a div for each step ~~~~~~~~~
1033<div id="step-5d" class="step">
1034<div class="main">
1035
1036<h3>Make your public key part of your online identity</h3>
1037
1038<p> First add your public key fingerprint to your email signature, then
1039compose an email to at least five of your friends, telling them you just
1040set up GnuPG and mentioning your public key fingerprint. Link to this guide
1041and ask them to join you. Don't forget that there's also an awesome <a
1042href="infographic.html">infographic to share.</a></p>
1043
1044<p class="notes">Start writing your public key fingerprint anywhere someone
1045would see your email address: your social media profiles, blog, Website,
1046or business card. (At the Free Software Foundation, we put ours on our
1047<a href="https://fsf.org/about/staff">staff page</a>.) We need to get our
1048culture to the point that we feel like something is missing when we see an
1049email address without a public key fingerprint.</p>
1050
1051</div>--><!-- End .main
1052</div> End #step-5d .step-->
1053</div></section><!-- End #section5 -->
1054
1055<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Section 6: Next steps ~~~~~~~~~ -->
b3eff1c4 1056<section class="row" id="section6">
39c89f44
TG
1057<div id="step-click_here" class="step">
1058<div class="main">
4f3e4963 1059
39c89f44 1060<h2><a href="next_steps.html">Great job! Check out the next steps.</a></h2>
2b82530f 1061
39c89f44
TG
1062</div><!-- End .main -->
1063</div><!-- End #step-click_here .step-->
b3eff1c4 1064</section><!-- End #section6 -->
2b82530f 1065
39c89f44 1066<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ FAQ ~~~~~~~~~ -->
b3eff1c4
ZR
1067<!-- When un-commenting this section go to main.css and search
1068for /* Guide Sections Background */ then add #faq to the desired color
39c89f44 1069<section class="row" id="faq"><div>
b3eff1c4 1070<div class="sidebar">
39c89f44 1071
b3eff1c4 1072<h2>FAQ</h2>
b3eff1c4 1073
39c89f44 1074</div>
b3eff1c4 1075<div class="main">
39c89f44 1076
b3eff1c4
ZR
1077<dl>
1078<dt>My key expired</dt>
1079<dd>Answer coming soon.</dd>
1080
1081<dt>Who can read encrypted messages? Who can read signed ones?</dt>
1082<dd>Answer coming soon.</dd>
1083
39c89f44
TG
1084<dt>My email program is opening at times I don't want it to open/is now my
1085default program and I don't want it to be.</dt>
b3eff1c4
ZR
1086<dd>Answer coming soon.</dd>
1087</dl>
39c89f44 1088
b3eff1c4
ZR
1089</div>
1090</div>
1091</section> --><!-- End #faq -->
1092
39c89f44
TG
1093<!-- ~~~~~~~~~ Footer ~~~~~~~~~ -->
1094<footer class="row" id="footer"><div>
1095<div id="copyright">
1096
1097<h4><a href="https://u.fsf.org/ys"><img
1098alt="Free Software Foundation"
1099src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/fsf-logo.png" /></a></h4>
1100
1101<p>Copyright &copy; 2014-2016 <a
1102href="https://u.fsf.org/ys">Free Software Foundation</a>, Inc. <a
1103href="https://my.fsf.org/donate/privacypolicy.html">Privacy Policy</a>. Please
1104support our work by <a href="https://u.fsf.org/yr">joining us as an associate
1105member.</a></p>
1106
1107<p>The images on this page are under a <a
1108href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons
1109Attribution 4.0 license (or later version)</a>, and the rest of it is under
1110a <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0">Creative Commons
1111Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 license (or later version)</a>. Download the <a
1112href="http://agpl.fsf.org/emailselfdefense.fsf.org/edward/CURRENT/edward.tar.gz">source
1113code of Edward reply bot</a> by Andrew Engelbrecht
1114&lt;sudoman@ninthfloor.org&gt; and Josh Drake &lt;zamnedix@gnu.org&gt;,
1115available under the GNU Affero General Public License. <a
1116href="http://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html#OtherLicenses">Why these
1117licenses?</a></p>
1118
1119<p>Fonts used in the guide &amp; infographic: <a
1120href="https://www.google.com/fonts/specimen/Dosis">Dosis</a> by Pablo
1121Impallari, <a href="http://www.google.com/fonts/specimen/Signika">Signika</a>
1122by Anna Giedry&#347;, <a
1123href="http://www.google.com/fonts/specimen/Archivo+Narrow">Archivo
1124Narrow</a> by Omnibus-Type, <a
1125href="https://libreplanet.org/wiki/GPG_guide/Graphics_Howto#Pitfalls">PXL-2000</a>
1126by Florian Cramer.</p>
1127
1128<p>Download the <a href="emailselfdefense_source.zip">source package</a>
1129for this guide, including fonts, image source files and the text of Edward's
1130messages.</p>
1131
1132<p>This site uses the Weblabels standard for labeling <a
1133href="https://www.fsf.org/campaigns/freejs">free JavaScript</a>. View
1134the JavaScript <a href="//weblabels.fsf.org/emailselfdefense.fsf.org/"
1135rel="jslicense">source code and license information</a>.</p>
1136
1137</div><!-- /#copyright -->
1138
1139<p class="credits">Infographic and guide design by <a rel="external"
1140href="http://jplusplus.org"><strong>Journalism++</strong><img
1141src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/img/jplusplus.png"
1142alt="Journalism++" /></a></p><!-- /.credits -->
1143</div></footer><!-- End #footer -->
b3eff1c4
ZR
1144
1145<script src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/js/jquery-1.11.0.min.js"></script>
1146<script src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/enc-dev0/js/scripts.js"></script>
1147
1148<!-- Piwik -->
1149<script type="text/javascript" >
1150// @license magnet:?xt=urn:btih:1f739d935676111cfff4b4693e3816e664797050&dn=gpl-3.0.txt GPL-v3-or-Later
1151var pkBaseURL = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://piwik.fsf.org/" : "http://piwik.fsf.org/");
1152document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + pkBaseURL + "piwik.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E"));
1153try {
1154 var piwikTracker = Piwik.getTracker(pkBaseURL + "piwik.php", 13);
1155 piwikTracker.trackPageView();
1156 piwikTracker.enableLinkTracking();
1157} catch( err ) {}
1158// @license-end
1159</script><noscript><p><img src="//piwik.fsf.org/piwik.php?idsite=13" style="border:0" alt="" /></p></noscript>
1160<!-- End Piwik Tracking Code -->
1161
b3eff1c4 1162</body>
4f3e4963 1163</html>