[seahorse/wip/userdocs: 178/416] help: add group and groups information to learning sections
- From: Aruna Sankaranarayanan <arunasank src gnome org>
- To: commits-list gnome org
- Cc:
- Subject: [seahorse/wip/userdocs: 178/416] help: add group and groups information to learning sections
- Date: Sun, 16 Mar 2014 20:44:25 +0000 (UTC)
commit 062c98486add9b50261f4a7b3c96c199a80fc446
Author: Jim Campbell <jwcampbell gmail com>
Date: Tue Feb 26 01:19:18 2013 +0100
help: add group and groups information to learning sections
reworked what-diff-priv-public page
help/C/encryption-dsa.page | 2 +-
help/C/encryption-rsa.page | 2 +-
help/C/index.page | 2 +-
help/C/key-strength-define.page | 2 +-
help/C/what-diff-private-public.page | 35 ++++++++++++++++-----------------
5 files changed, 21 insertions(+), 22 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/help/C/encryption-dsa.page b/help/C/encryption-dsa.page
index 2b22246..653c77d 100644
--- a/help/C/encryption-dsa.page
+++ b/help/C/encryption-dsa.page
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
type="topic" style="task"
id="encryption-dsa">
<info>
- <link type="guide" xref="index#learn-about-keys" group="first"/>
+ <link type="guide" xref="index#learn-about-keys" group="second"/>
<revision version="0.1" date="2011-10-23" status="draft"/>
<credit type="author">
diff --git a/help/C/encryption-rsa.page b/help/C/encryption-rsa.page
index df5e644..635c992 100644
--- a/help/C/encryption-rsa.page
+++ b/help/C/encryption-rsa.page
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
id="encryption-rsa">
<info>
<desc></desc>
- <link type="guide" xref="index#learn-about-keys" group="first"/>
+ <link type="guide" xref="index#learn-about-keys" group="second"/>
<revision version="0.1" date="2011-10-23" status="draft"/>
<credit type="author">
diff --git a/help/C/index.page b/help/C/index.page
index 9240ee3..31b209e 100644
--- a/help/C/index.page
+++ b/help/C/index.page
@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@
to keep your information secure on your computer, and secure when you send
information over a network.</p>
- <section id="learn-about-keys" style="2column">
+ <section id="learn-about-keys" style="2column" groups="first second third">
<title>Learn about keys</title>
</section>
diff --git a/help/C/key-strength-define.page b/help/C/key-strength-define.page
index f583a7a..fb7e8a6 100644
--- a/help/C/key-strength-define.page
+++ b/help/C/key-strength-define.page
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
type="topic" style="task"
id="key-strength-define">
<info>
- <link type="guide" xref="index#learn-about-keys"/>
+ <link type="guide" xref="index#learn-about-keys" group="second"/>
<revision version="0.1" date="2011-10-23" status="stub"/>
<credit type="author">
diff --git a/help/C/what-diff-private-public.page b/help/C/what-diff-private-public.page
index 8d777ef..d63eea5 100644
--- a/help/C/what-diff-private-public.page
+++ b/help/C/what-diff-private-public.page
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
id="what-diff-private-public">
<info>
<link type="guide" xref="index#learn-about-keys" group="second"/>
- <revision version="0.7" date="2012-12-29" status="draft"/>
+ <revision pkgversion="3.8" date="2013-02-26" status="incomplete"/>
<credit type="author">
<name>Jim Campbell</name>
@@ -17,25 +17,24 @@
<title>How is a Public key different from a Private key?</title>
<p>Although <em>Public Keys</em> and <em>Private Keys</em> are both referred
- to as keys, you can actually think of a <em>Public Key</em> as being like a
- padlock, and you can think of a <em>Private Key</em> as being like a key that
- unlocks the padlock.</p>
-
- <p>As an example, imagine that you want your friends to send you a secret
- message in a locked box. Using our analogy, you would first give each of your
- friends a box and a duplicate copy of a padlock. However, only you would have
- the key that unlocks those padlocks. You would keep that key private - you
- wouldn't share it with anyone.</p>
-
- <p>Your friends could then place their secret messages into their boxes, and
- lock the boxes with the padlocks. They would then send you the locked boxes
- via messenger, and you could open the boxes with your key.</p>
+ to as <em>keys</em>, it helps to think of them a bit differently. Try to
+ think of a <em>Public Key</em> as being like a padlock, and a
+ <em>Private Key</em> as being like a key that unlocks the padlock.</p>
+
+ <p>Let's use an example to see how this works. Imagine that you want your
+ friends to send you a secret message in a locked box. You could give each
+ of your friends a box and a padlock, but only you would have the key that
+ unlocks the padlocks.</p>
+
+ <p>Each friend could place their message into their box, and lock the box.
+ They could send you their locked box in the mail, and you could unlock all
+ of the boxes that you receive with your key.</p>
<p>This is similar to how a <em>Public Key</em> and a <em>Private Key</em>
work. Like the padlock, you can freely give out your <em>Public Key</em>. This
- will make it easy for anyone to securely encode a message that they want to
- send to you. Similarly, you will want to keep your <em>Private Key</em> safe.
- The <em>Private Key</em> is the tool that you will use to decode the secure
- messages that you receive.</p>
+ will make it easy for anyone to securely encrypt, or lock, a message that
+ they want to send to you. Similarly, you will want to keep your
+ <em>Private Key</em> safe. The <em>Private Key</em> is what allows you to
+ decrypt, or unlock, the secure messages that you receive.</p>
</page>
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