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Acknowledgements
OpenPGP is a manifestation of the political vision of Phil Zimmermann, reflecting his commitment to human rights and the peace movement. Therefore, we foremost acknowledge Phil, who, alongside early PGP developers, worked with dedication and courage to introduce one of the first sophisticated cryptographic tools to the world, despite substantial personal risk.
All subsequent projects in the OpenPGP space are indebted to the foundational ideas and principles of those early days1, including the pivotal decision to standardize the OpenPGP format through the IETF.
In the intervening three decades, many have contributed to the OpenPGP space. We recognize the civic-oriented work of those who have helped evolve the OpenPGP ecosystem into a tool for digital empowerment.
Team
The "Notes on OpenPGP" project is a collective endeavor, with contributions from a wide-ranging community.
The principal authors of this work, "OpenPGP for application developers," are:
- Tammi Coles (editor)
- Sabrina Kurtz (illustrator)
- Wiktor Kwapisiewicz
- David Runge
- Paul Schaub
- Heiko Schäfer
Expert advisors, readers, supporters
Andrew Gallagher provided input and discussions, particularly regarding the SKS Keyserver network.
Daniel Huigens was instrumental in shaping the early direction of this project.
Daniel Kahn Gillmor provided valuable input and encouragement.
Dennis Schmolk thoroughly reviewed the initial draft, offering detailed critiques.
Lance Vick contributed strategic communication advice.
Lars Wirzenius provided extensive feedback on early drafts.
Levente Polyak shared insights from the vantage point of an organization extensively using OpenPGP and developing custom OpenPGP applications.
Ryan Heywood gave early feedback on our binding signature visualizations.
Extended hat tips
Werner Koch for his enduring work on GnuPG and for fostering an interoperable ecosystem.
Sequoia-PGP, for bringing OpenPGP to the Rust language and developing an essential interoperability test suite.
Proton Mail for maintaining two crucial modern implementations of OpenPGP: OpenPGP.js and GopenPGP.
Funding
The Sovereign Tech Fund commissioned the initial development of this project from September to December 2023. We are extremely grateful for their support.
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These ideas and principles include some ongoing challenges, such as the puzzle of how to develop a scalable distributed PKI and trust model. ↩︎