From: Daniel Kahn Gillmor Date: Fri, 5 Sep 2008 06:10:15 +0000 (-0400) Subject: Standardizing on Monkeysphere instead of MonkeySphere X-Git-Tag: monkeysphere_0.15-1~13 X-Git-Url: http://git.tremily.us/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=203c14cf8f3e8f1e3862301d435c64456813e3ac;p=monkeysphere.git Standardizing on Monkeysphere instead of MonkeySphere --- diff --git a/website/community.mdwn b/website/community.mdwn index b7fa31e..d22f7cf 100644 --- a/website/community.mdwn +++ b/website/community.mdwn @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ -[[meta title="Community"]] +[[meta title="The Monkeysphere Community"]] -# The MonkeySphere Community # +# The Monkeysphere Community # ## Mailing list ## diff --git a/website/download.mdwn b/website/download.mdwn index a965826..64993c9 100644 --- a/website/download.mdwn +++ b/website/download.mdwn @@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ system is that lenny's GnuTLS can't support the `monkeysphere subkey-to-ssh-agent` subcommand. You can install a patched version of GnuTLS to enable this feature of -the MonkeySphere by adjusting the monkeysphere `sources.list` lines to +the Monkeysphere by adjusting the monkeysphere `sources.list` lines to include the `gnutls` component. So they'd look like this instead: deb http://archive.monkeysphere.info/debian experimental monkeysphere gnutls diff --git a/website/index.mdwn b/website/index.mdwn index b3675c6..2e756ae 100644 --- a/website/index.mdwn +++ b/website/index.mdwn @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ -[[meta title="The MonkeySphere Project"]] +[[meta title="The Monkeysphere Project"]] -# The MonkeySphere Project # +# The Monkeysphere Project # The Monkeysphere project's goal is to extend OpenPGP's web of trust to new areas of the Internet to help us securely identify each other diff --git a/website/why.mdwn b/website/why.mdwn index 054f930..3c70bab 100644 --- a/website/why.mdwn +++ b/website/why.mdwn @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ -[[meta title="Why should you be interested in the MonkeySphere?"]] +[[meta title="Why should you be interested in the Monkeysphere?"]] -# Why should you be interested in the MonkeySphere? # +# Why should you be interested in the Monkeysphere? # ## As an `ssh` user ## @@ -66,7 +66,7 @@ fingerprints) except in relatively rare situations (e.g. when two people meet in person for the first time). The good news is that this is all possible, and available with free -tools: welcome to the MonkeySphere! +tools: welcome to the Monkeysphere! ## Examples ## @@ -83,14 +83,14 @@ Alice can set up the new `bob` account on `foo.example.org` without needing to give Bob a new passphrase to remember, and without needing to even know Bob's current SSH key. She simply tells `foo` that `Bob ` should have access to the `bob` account. The -MonkeySphere on `foo` then verifies Bob's identity through the OpenPGP +Monkeysphere on `foo` then verifies Bob's identity through the OpenPGP Web of Trust and automatically add's Bob's SSH key to the authorized_keys file for the `bob` account. Bob's first connection to his new `bob` account on `foo.example.org` -is seamless, because the MonkeySphere on Bob's computer automatically +is seamless, because the Monkeysphere on Bob's computer automatically verifies the host key for `foo.example.org` for Bob. Using the -MonkeySphere, Bob never has to "accept" an unintelligible host key or +Monkeysphere, Bob never has to "accept" an unintelligible host key or type a password. When Bob decides to change the key he uses for SSH authentication, he