pgpkeys.but 9.4 KB

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  1. \A{pgpkeys} PuTTY download keys and signatures
  2. \I{verifying new versions}We create \i{GPG signatures} for all the PuTTY
  3. files distributed from our web site, so that users can be confident
  4. that the files have not been tampered with. Here we identify
  5. our public keys, and explain our signature policy so you can have an
  6. accurate idea of what each signature guarantees.
  7. This description is provided as both a web page on the PuTTY site, and
  8. an appendix in the PuTTY manual.
  9. As of release 0.58, all of the PuTTY executables contain fingerprint
  10. material (usually accessed via the \i\c{-pgpfp} command-line
  11. option), such that if you have an executable you trust, you can use
  12. it to establish a trust path, for instance to a newer version
  13. downloaded from the Internet.
  14. As of release 0.67, the Windows executables and installer also contain
  15. built-in signatures that are automatically verified by Windows' own
  16. mechanism (\q{\i{Authenticode}}). The keys used for that are different,
  17. and are not covered here.
  18. (Note that none of the keys, signatures, etc mentioned here have
  19. anything to do with keys used with SSH - they are purely for verifying
  20. the origin of files distributed by the PuTTY team.)
  21. \H{pgpkeys-pubkey} Public keys
  22. We maintain multiple keys, stored with different levels of security
  23. due to being used in different ways. See \k{pgpkeys-security} below
  24. for details.
  25. The keys we provide are:
  26. \dt Snapshot Key
  27. \dd Used to sign routine development builds of PuTTY: nightly
  28. snapshots, pre-releases, and sometimes also custom diagnostic builds
  29. we send to particular users.
  30. \dt Release Key
  31. \dd Used to sign manually released versions of PuTTY.
  32. \dt Secure Contact Key
  33. \dd An encryption-capable key suitable for people to send confidential
  34. messages to the PuTTY team, e.g. reports of vulnerabilities.
  35. \dt Master Key
  36. \dd Used to tie all the above keys into the GPG web of trust. The
  37. Master Key signs all the other keys, and other GPG users have signed
  38. it in turn.
  39. The current issue of those keys are available for download from the
  40. PuTTY website, and are also available on PGP keyservers using the key
  41. IDs listed below.
  42. \dt \W{https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/keys/master-2018.asc}{\s{Master Key} (2018)}
  43. \dd RSA, 4096-bit. Key ID: \cw{76BC7FE4EBFD2D9E}. Fingerprint:
  44. \cw{24E1\_B1C5\_75EA\_3C9F\_F752\_\_A922\_76BC\_7FE4\_EBFD\_2D9E}
  45. \dt \W{https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/keys/release-2018.asc}{\s{Release Key} (2018)}
  46. \dd RSA, 3072-bit. Key ID: \cw{6289A25F4AE8DA82}. Fingerprint:
  47. \cw{E273\_94AC\_A3F9\_D904\_9522\_\_E054\_6289\_A25F\_4AE8\_DA82}
  48. \dt \W{https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/keys/snapshot-2018.asc}{\s{Snapshot Key} (2018)}
  49. \dd RSA, 3072-bit. Key ID: \cw{38BA7229B7588FD1}. Fingerprint:
  50. \cw{C92B\_52E9\_9AB6\_1DDA\_33DB\_\_2B7A\_38BA\_7229\_B758\_8FD1}
  51. \dt \W{https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/keys/contact-2018.asc}{\s{Secure Contact Key} (2018)}
  52. \dd RSA, 3072-bit. Key ID: \cw{657D487977F95C98}. Fingerprint:
  53. \cw{A680\_0082\_2998\_6E46\_22CA\_\_0E43\_657D\_4879\_77F9\_5C98}
  54. \H{pgpkeys-security} Security details
  55. The various keys have various different security levels. This
  56. section explains what those security levels are, and how far you can
  57. expect to trust each key.
  58. \S{pgpkeys-snapshot} The Development Snapshots key
  59. The Development Snapshots private key is stored \e{without a
  60. passphrase}. This is necessary, because the snapshots are generated
  61. every night without human intervention, so nobody would be able to
  62. type a passphrase.
  63. The snapshots are built and signed on a team member's home computers,
  64. before being uploaded to the web server from which you download them.
  65. Therefore, a signature from the Development Snapshots key \e{DOES}
  66. protect you against:
  67. \b People tampering with the PuTTY binaries between the PuTTY web site
  68. and you.
  69. \b The maintainers of our web server attempting to abuse their root
  70. privilege to tamper with the binaries.
  71. But it \e{DOES NOT} protect you against:
  72. \b People tampering with the binaries before they are uploaded to our
  73. download servers.
  74. \b People tampering with the build machines so that the next set of
  75. binaries they build will be malicious in some way.
  76. \b People stealing the unencrypted private key from the build machine
  77. it lives on.
  78. Of course, we take all reasonable precautions to guard the build
  79. machines. But when you see a signature, you should always be certain
  80. of precisely what it guarantees and precisely what it does not.
  81. \S{pgpkeys-release} The Releases key
  82. The Releases key is more secure: because it is only used at release
  83. time, to sign each release by hand, we can store it encrypted.
  84. The Releases private key is kept encrypted on the developers' own
  85. local machines. So an attacker wanting to steal it would have to also
  86. steal the passphrase.
  87. \S{pgpkeys-contact} The Secure Contact Key
  88. The Secure Contact Key is stored with a similar level of security to
  89. the Release Key: it is stored with a passphrase, and no automated
  90. script has access to it.
  91. \S{pgpkeys-master} The Master Keys
  92. The Master Key signs almost nothing. Its purpose is to bind the other
  93. keys together and certify that they are all owned by the same people
  94. and part of the same integrated setup. The only signatures produced by
  95. the Master Key, \e{ever}, should be the signatures on the other keys.
  96. The Master Key is especially long, and its private key and passphrase
  97. are stored with special care.
  98. We have collected some third-party signatures on the Master Key, in
  99. order to increase the chances that you can find a suitable trust path
  100. to them.
  101. We have uploaded our various keys to public keyservers, so that
  102. even if you don't know any of the people who have signed our
  103. keys, you can still be reasonably confident that an attacker would
  104. find it hard to substitute fake keys on all the public keyservers at
  105. once.
  106. \H{pgpkeys-rollover} Key rollover
  107. Our current keys were generated in August 2018.
  108. Each new Master Key is signed with the old one, to show that it really
  109. is owned by the same people and not substituted by an attacker.
  110. Each new Master Key also signs the previous Release Keys, in case
  111. you're trying to verify the signatures on a release prior to the
  112. rollover and can find a chain of trust to those keys from any of the
  113. people who have signed our new Master Key.
  114. Each release is signed with the Release Key that was current at the
  115. time of release. We don't go back and re-sign old releases with newly
  116. generated keys.
  117. The details of all previous keys are given here.
  118. \s{Key generated in 2016} (when we first introduced the Secure Contact Key)
  119. \dt \W{https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/keys/contact-2016.asc}{\s{Secure Contact Key} (2016)}
  120. \dd RSA, 2048-bit. Main key ID: \cw{2048R/8A0AF00B} (long version:
  121. \cw{2048R/C4FCAAD08A0AF00B}). Encryption subkey ID:
  122. \cw{2048R/50C2CF5C} (long version: \cw{2048R/9EB39CC150C2CF5C}).
  123. Fingerprint:
  124. \cw{8A26\_250E\_763F\_E359\_75F3\_\_118F\_C4FC\_AAD0\_8A0A\_F00B}
  125. \s{Keys generated in the 2015 rollover}
  126. \dt \W{https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/keys/master-2015.asc}{\s{Master Key} (2015)}
  127. \dd RSA, 4096-bit. Key ID: \cw{4096R/04676F7C} (long version:
  128. \cw{4096R/AB585DC604676F7C}). Fingerprint:
  129. \cw{440D\_E3B5\_B7A1\_CA85\_B3CC\_\_1718\_AB58\_5DC6\_0467\_6F7C}
  130. \dt \W{https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/keys/release-2015.asc}{\s{Release Key} (2015)}
  131. \dd RSA, 2048-bit. Key ID: \cw{2048R/B43434E4} (long version:
  132. \cw{2048R/9DFE2648B43434E4}). Fingerprint:
  133. \cw{0054\_DDAA\_8ADA\_15D2\_768A\_\_6DE7\_9DFE\_2648\_B434\_34E4}
  134. \dt \W{https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/keys/snapshot-2015.asc}{\s{Snapshot Key} (2015)}
  135. \dd RSA, 2048-bit. Key ID: \cw{2048R/D15F7E8A} (long version:
  136. \cw{2048R/EEF20295D15F7E8A}). Fingerprint:
  137. \cw{0A3B\_0048\_FE49\_9B67\_A234\_\_FEB6\_EEF2\_0295\_D15F\_7E8A}
  138. \s{Original keys generated in 2000} (two sets, RSA and DSA)
  139. \dt \W{https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/keys/master-rsa.asc}{\s{Master Key} (original RSA)}
  140. \dd RSA, 1024-bit. Key ID: \cw{1024R/1E34AC41} (long version:
  141. \cw{1024R/9D5877BF1E34AC41}). Fingerprint:
  142. \cw{8F\_15\_97\_DA\_25\_30\_AB\_0D\_\_88\_D1\_92\_54\_11\_CF\_0C\_4C}
  143. \dt \W{https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/keys/master-dsa.asc}{\s{Master Key} (original DSA)}
  144. \dd DSA, 1024-bit. Key ID: \cw{1024D/6A93B34E} (long version:
  145. \cw{1024D/4F5E6DF56A93B34E}). Fingerprint:
  146. \cw{313C\_3E76\_4B74\_C2C5\_F2AE\_\_83A8\_4F5E\_6DF5\_6A93\_B34E}
  147. \dt \W{https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/keys/release-rsa.asc}{\s{Release Key} (original RSA)}
  148. \dd RSA, 1024-bit. Key ID: \cw{1024R/B41CAE29} (long version:
  149. \cw{1024R/EF39CCC0B41CAE29}). Fingerprint:
  150. \cw{AE\_65\_D3\_F7\_85\_D3\_18\_E0\_\_3B\_0C\_9B\_02\_FF\_3A\_81\_FE}
  151. \dt \W{https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/keys/release-dsa.asc}{\s{Release Key} (original DSA)}
  152. \dd DSA, 1024-bit. Key ID: \cw{1024D/08B0A90B} (long version:
  153. \cw{1024D/FECD6F3F08B0A90B}). Fingerprint:
  154. \cw{00B1\_1009\_38E6\_9800\_6518\_\_F0AB\_FECD\_6F3F\_08B0\_A90B}
  155. \dt \W{https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/keys/snapshot-rsa.asc}{\s{Snapshot Key} (original RSA)}
  156. \dd RSA, 1024-bit. Key ID: \cw{1024R/32B903A9} (long version:
  157. \cw{1024R/FAAED21532B903A9}). Fingerprint:
  158. \cw{86\_8B\_1F\_79\_9C\_F4\_7F\_BD\_\_8B\_1B\_D7\_8E\_C6\_4E\_4C\_03}
  159. \dt \W{https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/keys/snapshot-dsa.asc}{\s{Snapshot Key} (original DSA)}
  160. \dd DSA, 1024-bit. Key ID: \cw{1024D/7D3E4A00} (long version:
  161. \cw{1024D/165E56F77D3E4A00}). Fingerprint:
  162. \cw{63DD\_8EF8\_32F5\_D777\_9FF0\_\_2947\_165E\_56F7\_7D3E\_4A00}