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?
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?
What a stupid name for a tool. Are they deliberately trying to make it unrecognizable when people read the word?
Not sure I get it. How do you create keys? I use kleopatra and never saw a plaintext.
pgp is already perfect lol thats too mucu
The pgp private key sitting on your computer is also plain text… Unless you encrypt it
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.
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
you can move it to your keystore in /etc/pki