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Keybase and KBFS

Keybase makes it easy to use GPG, and makes it even easier to share encrypted files with each other using a virtual file system called KBFS.

Who’s who?

Here are some sample users who are on Keybase, leveraging the ease of GPG:

Person Account Description
Ethan Pursley https://keybase.io/smoshysmosh Lead Web Architect at McGraw-Hill Education.
Ryan Parman https://keybase.io/skyzyx Experienced Software, DevOps, and Security Engineer. Creator of SimplePie, AWS SDK for PHP, and MFA-as-a-Service at WePay. Ambivert. Curious. Not a coffee drinker. Formerly: WePay, AWS, Yahoo!
Werner Vogels https://keybase.io/werner CTO at Amazon.com
Mitch Garnaat https://keybase.io/garnaat Creator of boto, botocore, and AWS CLI. Formerly at Amazon Web Services.
Chris Messina https://keybase.io/chrismessina Inventor the #hashtag, BarCamps and the co-working industry. Formerly at Google and Uber.
Mike Finch https://keybase.io/mkfnch Visual and interaction designer. Activist citizen. Formerly at Facebook and Amazon Web Services.
Coinbase https://keybase.io/coinbase Bringing Bitcoin to the masses.
Hashicorp https://keybase.io/hashicorp Cloud Infrastructure Automation. Consistent workflows to provision, secure, connect, and run any infrastructure for any application.

Share encrypted files with another user

With the Keybase client installed, you should have a new folder on your desktop.

Keybase KBFS

From there, you can navigate to (or create a new folder where) your Keybase username + the other person’s Keybase username is.

Keybase Share

NOTE: You can support more than 2 people by adding more usernames separated by commas.