-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hello! The latest release from the development branch of GnuPG is ready for public consumption. This is a branch to create what will be GnuPG 1.4 someday. It will change much more frequently than the 1.2.x "stable" branch, which will mainly be updated for bug fix reasons. The more GnuPG-familiar user is encouraged try this release (and the ones that will follow in the 1.3.x branch), and report back any problems to gnupg-devel@gnupg.org. In return, you get the latest code with the latest features. However, it is always important to keep in mind that this is still development code - please do not use it on anything mission-critical. Critical applications should always use the 1.2.x stable branch. You may notice the smaller tarball size for these development releases. This is due to the translations other than de being removed. You may also notice the smaller size of the compiled gpg binary, and that is due to some of the keyserver modifications. See the list below for more changes. The files are available from: ftp://ftp.gnupg.org/gcrypt/alpha/gnupg/gnupg-1.3.1.tar.gz (1506k) ftp://ftp.gnupg.org/gcrypt/alpha/gnupg/gnupg-1.3.1.tar.gz.sig ftp://ftp.gnupg.org/gcrypt/alpha/gnupg/gnupg-1.3.0-1.3.1.diff.gz (167k) MD5 checksums for the files are: bbfd0613a3309e10b2d8b9d7d08bbe8a gnupg-1.3.1.tar.gz.sig eaf6fd07ca5088c3f1589c20718b81d7 gnupg-1.3.1.tar.gz 55ef3ce7ae7532e5f377ea963b33d20e gnupg-1.3.0-1.3.1.diff.gz Noteworthy changes in version 1.3.1 (2002-11-12) - ------------------------------------------------ * Trust signature support. This is based on the Maurer trust model where a user can specify the trust level along with the signature with multiple levels so users can delegate certification ability to other users, possibly restricted by a regular expression on the user ID. Note that full trust signature support requires a regular expression parsing library. The regexp code from glibc 2.3.1 is included for those platforms that don''t have working regexp functions available. The configure option --disable-regex may be used to disable any regular expression code, which will make GnuPG ignore any trust signature with a regular expression included. * Two new commands --hidden-recipient (-R) and --hidden-encrypt-to encrypt to a user, but hide the identity of that user. This is the same functionality as --throw-keyid, but can be used on a per-user basis. * Full algorithm names (e.g. "3DES", "SHA1", "ZIP") can now be used interchangeably with the short algorithm names (e.g. "S2", "H2", "Z1") anywhere algorithm names are used in GnuPG. Happy Hacking, The GnuPG team (David, Stefan, Timo and Werner) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.3.1-cvs (GNU/Linux) iQEVAwUBPdE2qoccwqs8s7QVAQFkzggAs//YhGaDx+CNkdRLKE9lqF0dqqQ43d4J Qq1DUivQMwgtfECuo4NJeNWQXdGxj786Ll5Yo+XiKineIbK6167Ha9D8ZjUoIyZ9 Bv5a72osNoUqaDmsfDp718pkQpl76Olx1RUwwCwogu2ypocBlPhMxL74jpX0EeZk cKwZHOVCZ6qgsEeg/p4aaqgxKitxsa5JYhT4f1j4Q8v5nbGZ2ZB6inq1pTVOKslT wQGNhZAToycykEUkURquG1uXXrq6iMdCJrnHINQ3p08xDLwojZX3HJEmsQNrioTu jc/SzVZYMNlvfhl9fhwX5C9vM4pzrYst/xZcVrMxQxCN49shoos3LA==PH4r -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----