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by lrvick 16 days ago
When you sign a key you pick a trust level. If no one reputable has ever trusted a persons key with a higher level than "human", then that key should be subject to significantly higher scrutiny.

If you look at my key, you will find it is heavily connected to the keys that sign most linux distributions, bitcoin, and commits to the Linux kernel today.

If those 5444 linked identities that long pre-date AI are colluded to create a fake me and fake people that signed people who signed me over the last 25 years, and got those fake fingerprints in the keychains of every distro and got matching fingerprints on thousands of privately owned sites, we indeed have serious problems.

1 comments

Yes, that would be the conundrum I was describing. If your plan were to work, the idea of a signer being "reputable" would be watered down into nothing.
Well, it is working as intended, right now, and the binaries running on the servers we are communicating with right now were likely signed and validated with Linux maintainer PGP keys because it is the only standard and decentralized option.

PGP does not need mass adoption to function, but with solutions like keyoxide offering a more accessible trust onramp, it is there for anyone that wants to self certify and take control of their own identity today, and get signed by trusted community members tomorrow at a conference.