You @strong{have to} verify downloaded tarballs authenticity to be sure that you retrieved trusted and untampered software. There are two options: @table @asis @item @url{https://www.openpgp.org/, OpenPGP} @file{.asc} signature Use @url{https://www.gnupg.org/, GNU Privacy Guard} free software implementation. For the very first time it is necessary to get signing public key and import it. It is provided @url{PUBKEY-PGP.asc, here}, but you should check alternate resources. @verbatim pub ed25519/0x81CBFB0071478516 2023-08-11 42C7 B86A 4A7D C44B 837C 4343 81CB FB00 7147 8516 uid tofuproxy releases @end verbatim @example $ gpg --auto-key-locate dane --locate-keys tofuproxy at cypherpunks dot ru $ gpg --auto-key-locate wkd --locate-keys tofuproxy at cypherpunks dot ru @end example @item @url{https://www.openssh.com/, OpenSSH} @file{.sig} signature @url{PUBKEY-SSH.pub, Public key} and its OpenPGP @url{PUBKEY-SSH.pub.asc, signature} made with the key above. Its fingerprint: @code{SHA256:TFmIjNNqfRmyz7gq/ajvsmz6CAvs1FEAvgDZk3zNDy8}. @example $ ssh-keygen -Y verify -f PUBKEY-SSH.pub -I tofuproxy@@cypherpunks.ru -n file \ -s tofuproxy-@value{VERSION}.tar.zst.sig < tofuproxy-@value{VERSION}.tar.zst @end example @end table