This is an old revision of the document!
Complicated ? No, honestly, it isn't ! Try it out, it's worth it (and I'm not affilitated to the Enigmail guys ).
o Debian: apt-get install gnupg
o Windows: get it from [[http://www.gpg4win.org/|GPG4Win ]] * Make sure your [[http://www.mozilla.com/thunderbird/|Thunderbird]] - or any other mailer that supports Enigmail - is decently configured. * Download [[http://enigmail.mozdev.org/download.html|Enigmail]] : it's a Thunderbird plugin (.xpi). Use a right-click to download it (if you click on it with Firefox, you'll install the plugin in Firefox which is quite useless !). * Install the plugin in Thunderbird: Tools -> Extensions -> Install * Restart Thunderbird
Open Thunderbird:
OpenPGP → Preferences:
o On Linux, locate gpg (whereis gpg, which gpg, locate gpg…). Typically, it'll be in /usr/bin.
o On Windows, search for gpg.exe. Typically, something like c:\program files\gnupg\gpg.exe * If you don't see the other tabs, in the Basic tab, check "expert" mode. * Sending: enable "Encrypt to self" (makes sure that you'll be able to re-read encrypted emails you've sent to your recipients !), "Always trust user ID", "Always confirm before sending" (I like to make sure I'm sending confidential stuff to the right person !), "Rewrap signed HTML before sending", "allow empty subject" (just to avoid the warning when subject is empty) * Key selection: display selection when necessary (only shows the key selection window when it does not know which key to choose) * Advanced: encrypt if replying to encrypted message (seems a good thing)
Edit → Account Settings → OpenPGP Security
Thunderbird → OpenPGP → Key Management → Generate → New Key Pair
For example:
The easiest way to do that is:
No, if you insist on doing it the hard way :