Appendix A. Getting Started with Gnu Privacy Guard

An Introduction to GnuPG

Have you ever wondered if your email can be read during its transmission from you to other people, or from other people to you? Unfortunately, complete strangers could conceivably intercept or even tamper with your email.

In traditional (also known as "snail") mail, letters are usually sealed within envelopes, stamped and delivered from post office branch to branch until they reach their destination. But sending mail through the Internet is much less secure; email is usually transmitted as unencrypted text from server to server. No special steps are taken to protect your correspondence from being seen or tampered with by other people.

To help you protect your privacy, Red Hat Linux 7.1 includes GnuPG, the GNU Privacy Guard, which is installed by default during a typical Red Hat Linux installation. It is also referred to as GPG.

GnuPG is a tool for secure communication; it is a complete and free replacement for the encryption technology of PGP (Pretty Good Privacy, a widely popular encryption application). Using GnuPG, you can encrypt your data and correspondence, and authenticate your correspondence by digitally signing your work. GnuPG is also capable of decrypting and verifying PGP 5.x.

Because GnuPG is compatible with other encryption standards, your secure correspondence will probably be compatible with email applications on other operating systems, such as Windows and Macintosh.

GnuPG uses public key cryptography to provide users with a secure exchange of data. In a public key cryptography scheme, you generate two keys: a public key and a private key. You exchange your public key with correspondents or with a keyserver; you should never reveal your private key.

Encryption depends upon the use of keys. In conventional or symmetric cryptography, both ends of the transaction have the same key, which they use to decode each other's transmissions. In public key cryptography, two keys co-exist: a public key and a private key. A person or an organization keeps their private key a secret, and publishes their public key. Data encoded with the public key can only be decoded with the private key; data encoded with the private key can only be decoded with the public key.

ImportantDo Not Reveal Your Private Key
 

Remember that your public key can be given to anyone with whom you want to communicate securely, but you must never give away your private key.

For the most part, cryptography is beyond the scope of this publication; volumes have been written about the subject. In this chapter, however, we hope you'll gain enough understanding about GnuPG to begin using cryptography in your own correspondence. For more information about GnuPG, including an online users guide, visit http://www.gnupg.org/. If you want to learn more about GnuPG, PGP and encryption technology, see the section called Additional Resources.

TipMore Information From the Shell Prompt
 

Like most system tools for Red Hat Linux, you'll find documentation on GnuPG in the man pages and info pages. At a shell prompt, just type man gpg or info gpg for a quick reference of GnuPG commands and options.