correct typo

This commit is contained in:
Tammi L. Coles 2023-10-06 16:14:07 +02:00 committed by Heiko Schaefer
parent 02603ef7db
commit a8c14033a7
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG key ID: 4A849A1904CCBD7D

View file

@ -94,7 +94,7 @@ There is [ongoing work](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-wussler-openpgp-p
## Concepts ## Concepts
```{admonition} TODO ```{admonition} TODO
Move operations to Ch1, figure out where to place or abbreviate certificates and keys section, drop building blocks and interoperability Move operations & building blocks statement to Ch1, create Ch2a with the rest
``` ```
### Certificates and keys in OpenPGP ### Certificates and keys in OpenPGP
@ -104,7 +104,7 @@ In this framework, bare cryptographic keys are combined with additional metadata
An OpenPGP certificate is dynamic, evolving over time as components are added, expire, or are marked as invalid. An OpenPGP certificate is dynamic, evolving over time as components are added, expire, or are marked as invalid.
For detailed information on structure and handling, read our chapters on OpenPGP [certificates"](certificates_chapter) and [private keys](private_key_chapter). For detailed information on structure and handling, read our chapters on OpenPGP [certificates](certificates_chapter) and [private keys](private_key_chapter).
Beyond the basics, managing certificates, as well as understanding their authentication and trust models, are crucial topics. Though this document will only briefly touch on these aspects, they constitute an integral part of working with OpenPGP. Beyond the basics, managing certificates, as well as understanding their authentication and trust models, are crucial topics. Though this document will only briefly touch on these aspects, they constitute an integral part of working with OpenPGP.