Sorry, I noticed this message just now. -- I was the one who expressed the interest of getting the key signed before. 

So bring paper copies of our signatures to enable exchange is the only thing need to get my key signed?  -- I'm asking because if I come to today's meeting, I have to get back home now, to grab my laptop (if that paper copy is not enough and I also need to sign other people's key as well), then head back downtown again. and I'm not too sure if my GPG key is secure enough to be used & signed by other people. -- I.e., I was planning to review it once I confirm a key signing date. 

Can we host the key signing party in the next meeting please? 

because going through the message trail, I did find one more person requesting to be on the next meeting, 

 I should be able to attend the April 10th meeting though.

OK? Thx. 



On Fri, Mar 9, 2018 at 9:45 PM, Christopher Browne via talk - talk@gtalug.org wrote:
On 9 March 2018 at 20:56, Rouben via talk <talk@gtalug.org> wrote:
> Hello everyone!
>
> I’m a newbie to this list. The name is Rouben Tchakhmakhtchian; I’ve been a
> Linux user since about 1998 (dabbled with it a bit before that). I’m
> currently working at UofT in IT, and am still a die-hard open source
> enthusiast.
>
> I was wondering, does the GTALUG community still organize GPG key signing
> events? If not, I would also like to know how much interest there would be
> in such an event.
>
> Thanks in advance, and my apologies if this is an FAQ type post. I’d be
> happy to RTFM if you kindly point me in the right direction. :)
>
> Cheers and have a great weekend!

It's not something that happens terribly frequently; a lot of people have
over the years gotten their favoured keys signed, so there's not a
continuous call for more.

That said, someone did send out a note a couple or three weeks ago
expressing interest, and it's certainly something that we could take a
little while discussing and doing at our next meeting this coming
Tuesday.

People interested in getting keys signed should bring paper copies
of their signatures to enable exchange.

It may also be worth visiting BigLumber.com that collects keys of
people interested in doing key exchanges.

http://biglumber.com/x/web?sl=97

Some of the material there is pretty old, but I recognize some likely
names...
--
When confronted by a difficult problem, solve it by reducing it to the
question, "How would the Lone Ranger handle this?"
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