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<div class="about">
<center><h2>About | <a href="/about/news">News</a> | <a href="/about/usage">Usage</a> | <a href="/about/faq">FAQ</a> | <a href="/about/stats">Stats</a> | <a href="/about/privacy">Privacy</a></h2></center>
<p>
The <span class="brand">keys.openpgp.org</span> server is a public service for the
distribution and discovery of OpenPGP-compatible keys, commonly
referred to as a "keyserver".
</p>
<p>
<strong>For instructions, see our <a href="/about/usage">usage guide</a>.</strong>
</p>
<h3>How it works</h3>
<p>
An OpenPGP key contains two types of information:
</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Identity information</strong> describes the parts of
a key that identify its owner, also known as "User IDs".
A User ID typically includes a name and an email address.
</li>
<li><strong>Non-identity information</strong> is all the technical
information about the key itself. This includes the large numbers
used for verifying signatures and encrypting messages.
It also includes metadata like date of creation, some expiration
dates, and revocation status.
</li>
</ul>
<p>
Traditionally, these pieces of information have always been distributed
together. On <span class="brand">keys.openpgp.org</span>, they are
treated differently. While anyone can upload all parts of any OpenPGP key
to <span class="brand">keys.openpgp.org</span>, our keyserver
will only retain and publish certain parts under certain
conditions:
</p>
<p>
Any <strong>non-identity information</strong> will be stored and freely
redistributed, if it passes a cryptographic integrity check.
Anyone can download these parts at any time as they contain only
technical data that can't be used to directly identify a person.
Good OpenPGP software can use <span class="brand">keys.openpgp.org</span>
to keep this information up to date for any key that it knows about.
This helps OpenPGP users maintain secure and reliable communication.
</p>
<p>
The <strong>identity information</strong> in an OpenPGP key
is only distributed with consent.
It contains personal data, and is not strictly necessary for
a key to be used for encryption or signature verification.
Once the owner gives consent by verifying their email address,
the key can be found via search by address.
</p>
<h3 id="community">Community and platform</h3>
<p>
This service is run as a community effort.
You can talk to us in
#hagrid on OFTC IRC,
also reachable as #hagrid:stratum0.org on Matrix.
Of course you can also reach us via email,
at <tt>support at keys dot openpgp dot org</tt>.
The folks who are running this come
from various projects in the OpenPGP ecosystem,
including Sequoia-PGP, OpenKeychain, and Enigmail.
</p>
<p>
Technically,
<span class="brand">keys.openpgp.org</span> runs on the <a href="https://gitlab.com/hagrid-keyserver/hagrid" target="_blank">Hagrid</a> keyserver software,
which is based on <a href="https://sequoia-pgp.org">Sequoia-PGP</a>.
We are running on <a href="https://eclips.is" target="_blank">eclips.is</a>,
a hosting platform focused on Internet Freedom projects,
which is managed by <a href="https://greenhost.net/" target="_blank">Greenhost</a>.
</p>
</div>
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