You can delete the User ID information from your public key by uploading its revocation certificate below. This will also make your public key unusable by anyone who attempts to download it from this keyserver or any of its partners.
(If you generated your key using GnuPG, there may already be a revocation certificate in the ~/.gnupg/openpgp-revocs.d directory on your computer)
When generating a new revocation certificate, be sure to select "no reason" or "key is compromised" if prompted to give a reason for revocation. Other answers to this question may not result in information deletion. If you make a mistake, you can generate a new revocation certificate with a different reason.
If you do not have a revocation certificate, and cannot generate a new one, please contact the site owner for assistance using the contact information on the stats page.
This is an OpenPGP keyserver.
It is provided to the community as a public service to help distribute OpenPGP public keys.
Queries about the operation of this service should be directed to the server contact listed on the stats page.
This server processes the following information:
OpenPGP public keys and revocation certificates are synchronised with this server's peers, which are listed on the stats page. Public keys may be gathered by direct submission to this server (either automatically via your OpenPGP client software or manually via the browser upload form), or indirectly from its peers.
This server does not use cookies.
This server is powered by the open-source keyserver software Hockeypuck. Hockeypuck is a synchronising keyserver that acts as part of a decentralised networked database for OpenPGP public keys.
To report a bug in the Hockeypuck software, or contribute to its development, please visit the Hockeypuck project on GitHub.
OpenPGP is an End-to-End encryption standard. It allows emails, files and other data to be encrypted so that they cannot be read by a third party, and/or signed so that they cannot be modified, while in transit between the sender and recipient. It is used primarily for high-latency and long-timescale applications such as email, software distribution, record archival and backups.