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Current challenges for the OpenPGP keyserver network. Is there a way forward?

This talk is titled "Current challenges for the OpenPGP keyserver network. Is there a way forward?," and was presented at LibrePlanet 2022 by Gunnar Wolf.

Gunnar is a free software user and promoter since 1995, Debian developer since 2003, and, from 2009, is now part of the Debian keyring-maintainers group.

This talk is about OpenPGP encryption or signatures, which is in use for various important tasks, like defining membership, authenticating participation, asserting identity over a vote, etc. In his talk, Gunnar will try to bring awareness to this situation, to some possible mitigations, and present some proposals to allow for the decentralized model to continue to thrive towards the future.

Slides: https://media.libreplanet.org/u/libreplanet/m/current-challenges-for-the-openpgp-keyserver-network-is-there-a-way-forward-slides/

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2 years, 4 months ago

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Living Liberation · LibrePlanet conference · LibrePlanet 2022 video · LibrePlanet 2022 · LibrePlanet · lp2022 · video · FSF

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CC BY-SA 4.0

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This talk was presented at LibrePlanet.

libreplanet.org


LibrePlanet is the Free Software Foundation's annual conference. The FSF campaigns for free/libre software, meaning it respects users' freedom and community. We believe that users are entitled to this; all software should be free.

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We do not advocate "open source".

That term was coined to reject our views. It refers to similar practices, but usually presented solely as advantageous, without talking of right and wrong.

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Richard Stallman launched the free software movement in 1983 by announcing development of the free operating system, GNU. By 1992, GNU was nearly operational; one major essential component was lacking, the kernel.

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In 1992, Torvalds freed the kernel Linux, which filled the last gap in GNU. Since then, the combined GNU/Linux system has run in millions of computers. Nowadays you can buy a new computer with a totally free GNU/Linux system preinstalled.

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The views of the speaker may not represent the Free Software Foundation. The Foundation supports the free software cause and freedom to share, and basic freedoms in the digital domain, but has no position on other political issues.