Provided by: claws-mail-pgpinline_4.3.0-1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       claws-mail-pgpinline - handle PGP/Inline signed and/or encrypted mails

DESCRIPTION

       This manual page documents briefly the claws-mail-pgpinline package.

       This manual page was written for the Debian™ distribution because the original program does not have a
       manual page.

       claws-mail-pgpinline is a plugin (loadable module) for the Claws Mail mailer.

       This plugin allows decrypting mails, verifying signatures and sign or encrypt your own mails using
       PGP/Inline.

       It requires GnuPG and GPGME.

   Warning
       Notice this method for signing or encryption is deprecated and you probably should be using PGP/MIME, but
       it is still provided for compatibility with user agents which are unable to handle the 10-year old
       PGP/MIME standard (being Outlook from Windows platform the most noticeable example).

USAGE

       Before using a plugin you must instruct Claws Mail to load it on startup.

       For this you must go “Configuration” menu on main window toolbar, open “Plugins...”  dialog, click on the
       “Load plugin...”  button and select the plugin file, named pgpinline.so, and press the “Open” button.

FILES

       ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf
           Configuration file for GnuPG, read gpg and gpgconf manual pages for details.

SEE ALSO

       gpg(1), gpgconf(1), claws-mail(1), claws-mail-pgpmime(7), claws-mail-extra-plugins(7).

AUTHORS

       The Claws Mail Team <theteam@claws-mail.org>
           Wrote the claws-mail-pgpinline plugin.

       Ricardo Mones <mones@debian.org>
           Wrote this manpage for the Debian™ system.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright © 2008-2020 Ricardo Mones

       This manual page was written for the Debian system (but may be used by others).

       Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU General
       Public License, Version 3 or (at your option) any later version published by the Free Software
       Foundation.

       On Debian systems, the complete text of the GNU General Public License can be found in
       /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL.