age seems to be the new hot thing to encrypt data.

However, when you generate a key pair, the private key just sits as a plaintext file on your computer.

Maybe I’m too used to PGP, but this makes me a bit nervous. There doesn’t see to be a key manager that allows you to pass in a key id with which you encrypt / decrypt. It’s all done using the public key directly in the command line (for encrypting), or the plaintext private key file (to decrypt).

Am I missing something? Is there a better / easier way to manage these private key files?

  • @StudioLE@programming.dev
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    1211 months ago

    The author pronounces it [aɡe̞] with a hard g, like GIF, and is always spelled lowercase.

    I can’t be the only one to think GIF is a terrible example for pronunciation?

  • @taladar@sh.itjust.works
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    1111 months ago

    What a stupid name for a tool. Are they deliberately trying to make it unrecognizable when people read the word?

    • auth
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      311 months ago

      The pgp private key sitting on your computer is also plain text… Unless you encrypt it

      • @Cipher22@lemmy.world
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        111 months ago

        Right? Op is trying to personify “we’ve tried nothing and we’re all or if ideas”. It’s almost like it’s a beast practice to encrypt data at rest, including your pain text keys.

        • @mimOP
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          11 months ago

          Have you actually used age?

          Unlike gpg, encryption of the private key is not default (or straightforward). It also doesn’t have a key management system

  • @birdcat@lemmy.ml
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    111 months ago

    Not sure I get it. How do you create keys? I use kleopatra and never saw a plaintext.