>You probably want to see the HTML in case the message has been sent using HTML.</p
><p
>You can see the messages in original HTML easily. Open View (menu) --> Message body as --> Original HTML.</p
><h2id="if-the-wizard-fails"
>If the wizard fails</h2
><h3id="sending-plaintext"
>Sending plaintext</h3
><p
>This is documented in my <ahref="../Thunderbird-Icedove.html#sending-utf-8"
>Icedove / Thunderbird guide</a
>.</p
><h3id="signing-by-default."
>Signing by default.</h3
><p
>Open Edit --> Account Settings --> OpenPGP security and select "Enable OpenPG support (Enigmail) with this user information". Then select "Use specific OpenPGP key" and press the "select key" button. Now just select your private key.</p
><p
>After you have selected the key, I recommend you to select the first and the second boxes, which are about signing.</p
><p
>Remember to do this for multiple identities. Select the account and then click the "manage identities" button.</p
><h2id="sending-utf-8"
>Sending UTF-8</h2
><p
>I have documented this in my <ahref="../Thunderbird-Icedove.html#sending-utf-8"
>Icedove / Thunderbird guide</a
>.</p
><p
>This only changes the charset line to UTF-8 or removes the mentioning of charset in signature.</p
><h1id="testing-that-everything-works"
>Testing that everything works</h1
><p
>Adele is PGP email bot. You can send email to it and it will tell you if it can decrypt your email or is it signed.</p
>Just send your email to adele-en@gnupp.de and it will reply shortly.</p
><h1id="sending-pgpmime-instead-of-pgpinline"
>Sending PGP/MIME instead of PGP/INLINE</h1
><p
>PGP/MIME puts the signature to signature.asc ataachment and PGP/INLINE into "mess" in the bottom of email.</p
><p
>WARNING: This might not work with some mailing lists (for example Ubuntu, Mozdev and GnuPG mailing lists)!</p
><p
>There is open bug report about PGP/MIME not working on Ubuntu MLs at LaunchPad, <ahref="https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+bug/996581"
>996581</a
></p
><p
>NOTE: If you want to sign emails and use HTML at the same time, you <em
>must</em
> use PGP/MIME or otherwise your signature cannot be verified!</p
><p
>To send PGP/MIME by default, open Edit --> Account Settings --> OpenPGP security and check "Use always PGP/MIME".</p
><p
>Remember to check to do this for your all identities in case you have more than one of them. Edit --> Account Settings -->"Manage Identities..." button and after selecting identity, you can find OpenPGP security tab.</p
><h1id="openpgp-headers."
>OpenPGP headers.</h1
><p
>To enable sending OpenPGP headers, return to OpenPGP settings (mentioned above) and click "advanced".</p
><p
>Select the both checkboxes and write URL where your key is located. If you don't have homepage, you can link to webui of your preferred keyserver.</p
><p
>These headers appear in email source like this:</p
><arel="license"href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/"><imgalt="Creative Commons License"style="border-width:0"src="http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by-nc-sa/3.0/88x31.png"/></a><br/><spanxmlns:dct="http://purl.org/dc/terms/"property="dct:title">Enigmail guide</span> is licensed under a <arel="license"href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/">Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License</a>.<br/>Based on a work at <axmlns:dct="http://purl.org/dc/terms/"href="http://mkaysi.github.com/articles/guides/GPG/Enigmail.html"rel="dct:source">mkaysi.github.com</a>.</p