<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
 
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        <title>Encryption Feed</title>
        <subtitle>A feed of things tagged 'Encryption', from Charlie Harvey's website</subtitle>
        <link href="http://charlieharvey.org.uk/tag.atom/Encryption" rel="self" xml:base="http://http://charlieharvey.org.uk/tag.atom/Encryption" />
        <id>http://charlieharvey.org.uk/tag.atom/Encryption/</id>
        <updated>2012-02-21T09:06:36Z</updated>
        <author>
                <name>Charlie Harvey</name>
        </author>


        <entry>
                <title>Vim Tip: Edit GPG files transparently</title>
                <link rel="alternate" href="http://charlieharvey.org.uk/page/edit_gpg_files_with_vim" type="text/html" />
                <id>http://charlieharvey.org.uk/page/edit_gpg_files_with_vim</id>
                <updated>2012-02-21T09:06:36Z</updated>
                <summary><![CDATA[
  A super quick Vim tip today courtesy of Patrick R. McDonald. I was looking for a nice way to have Vim open up files that I had GPGed. That is how I store passwords and its a faff and potentially insecure to decrypt, edit and resave. Nicer to have Vim open your GPG file directly. Patrick&#8217;s solution, Using GPG with Vi, based on work by Wouter Hanegraaff is just what I needed, using Vim&#8217;s aucmd functionality to prompt for passwords and to switch off viminfo and swap file. The caveat is that your kernel may write decrypted data to swap. But then of course you&#8217;ve encrypted your swap partition, right?
]]></summary>
				<author>
					<name>Charlie Harvey</name>
				</author>
        </entry>

        <entry>
                <title>Video: ORGCon Open BBC Session</title>
                <link rel="alternate" href="http://charlieharvey.org.uk/page/video_orgcon_open_bbc_session" type="text/html" />
                <id>http://charlieharvey.org.uk/page/video_orgcon_open_bbc_session</id>
                <updated>2011-05-19T11:22:36Z</updated>
                <summary><![CDATA[
        In case you haven&#39;t noticed their &quot;Protect Your Bits&quot; poster in the background of the IT Crowd, let me introduce the Open Rights Group. The work they&#39;re doing on digital civil rights is crucial to everyone who values freedom or privacy on the interwebs. Not just activists and geeks but everyone who doesn&#39;t want to see the UK sleepwalk into a surveillance society. They had a conference, ORGCon in London on 24 July and this is the Open BBC session from that conference with Tony Curzon Price from OpenDemocracy, Mo McRoberts, and David Tomlinson. With Cory Doctorow facilitating.
    ]]></summary>
				<author>
					<name>Charlie Harvey</name>
				</author>
        </entry>

        <entry>
                <title>Backtrack5, on an encrypted USB filesystem and nouveau driver</title>
                <link rel="alternate" href="http://charlieharvey.org.uk/page/backtrack5_encrypted_usb_and_nouveau_driver" type="text/html" />
                <id>http://charlieharvey.org.uk/page/backtrack5_encrypted_usb_and_nouveau_driver</id>
                <updated>2011-05-18T21:45:02Z</updated>
                <summary><![CDATA[
  Backtrack Linux has become increasingly useful to me over the last few months. The latest release Backtrack 5 came out on 10 May, so I, of course wanted to have a play. Just a little background on Backtrack. Its specifically aimed at security professionals and hackers and has everything that you might need to do information security work, digital forensics, pen testing and so on. The new release brings a GNOME desktop &ndash; the previous version was a KDE-only distro &ndash; which is a big deal for me. Its got the shinyness of Ubuntu with the focus of a proper infosec distro. Very, very good.   
]]></summary>
				<author>
					<name>Charlie Harvey</name>
				</author>
        </entry>

        <entry>
                <title>My GPG Key</title>
                <link rel="alternate" href="http://charlieharvey.org.uk/page/my_gpg_key" type="text/html" />
                <id>http://charlieharvey.org.uk/page/my_gpg_key</id>
                <updated>2010-12-04T13:14:15Z</updated>
                <summary><![CDATA[
    I mentioned on 2010-10-10 that I'd revoke my old B1233772 key and transition to 196AA973. I have now revoked it. There's a full writeup of why I did this on the Debian admin blog and a more accessible writeup of the DSA1 rollover at riseup.net.
  ]]></summary>
				<author>
					<name>Charlie Harvey</name>
				</author>
        </entry>

 
</feed>


