	FAQ

1. How legal is pgp4pine?
Note: I'M NOT A LAWYER! I HOPE TO NEVER BE A LAWYER! 
SEE YOUR/A LEGAL PROFESSIONAL BEFORE ACTING/THINKING ON THIS!!!!! 

Ok, pgp4pine *should* be legal anywhere in the world that C and your OS are
legal, although maybe not Iraq/Iran... It does NOT do any actual encryption
itself, it only is a convenient (hopefully!) interface to
PGP(tm)/GnuPG/other PKI-style programs. As such, it *should* be legal.

For the legality of PGP, read its documentation. Note that PGP is only free
of charge for non-commercial use, you might consider trying GPG instead 
(http://www.gnupg.org).

2. How do I ... ?
First step: type man pgp4pine. Then read docs/en/pgp4pinerc. In 1.3 I
implemented profiles, so if you used pgp4pine before 1.3, your .rc file
needs to be re-done... If this doesn't answer your question, send it to me
(holger@flatline.de).

3. When I just sign a mail, the output is sometimes encrypted!
The mail is not encrypted, only ASCII-armored. PGP does this when it 
encounters 'special' characters (), and without warning you. 
(GPG does not.) There is no way to prevent this.

4. Can you turn off the "Comment: Made with pgp4pine x.xx"?
Yes, add "add_comment=0" to your .pgp4pinerc file.

5. Where did the double-enter at the end go?
As of 1.60, if you want back the double-enter sequence, add 
extra_enter_at_end=1 to your .pgp4pinerc file.

6. I'm using PGP 2.x. Can I specify which keyrings to use?
No, PGP 2 only supports the default keyring files. PGP 5 and GnuPG
support whatever keyring you define in their preferences, by default 
the defaults.

7. If you need to report a problem, please do the following:
        Add --debug to the command line you're trying to run.
	Send your ~/pgp4pine.debug file to me (holger@flatline.de).
   If you encrypt it, make sure I am able to get your public key by putting
   it on a keyserver or somewhere :-))
