Post by íí ì¹´But, what do you mean: "Because you haven't established a chain of trust
from yourself to any of the signatures."
Imagine someone walks up to you on the street and hands you a contract,
which is signed by someone you've never heard of.
You don't know the guy who gave you the contract. You've never seen him
before. So, you don't trust him.
You can do a little bit of research on the person whose signature is on
the contract. Maybe she's famous. You look her up on the Internet, and
it turns out that she's well known in certain circles. If her signature
is on this contract, then the contract is probably worth something.
But how do you know whether this is really her signature, or a forgery?
If you knew her in person, you could go to her office, ask her to sign
something in your presence, and compare her signature to the one you see
on the contract.
But you don't know her in person. She lives really far away, and she's
too important and too busy to want to spend a lot of time signing blank
pieces of paper for people like you anyway.
But maybe you know someone who knows her. Your lawyer friend -- maybe
he's worked with her before. He might know what her signature looks
like. He might be able to tell you whether the signature on the contract
is valid.
So, you go to your lawyer friend, and you show him the contract, and
he says "Yeah, that looks legit."
Now you know what her signature looks like, or at least you've got
verification from a source that you trust.
Post by íí ì¹´Is it only for Debian developers? And is it very important?
In theory, anybody can attend a key signing party, and get in-person
verification of various GPG keys. Once you've got a few keys from
people that you trust, your web of trust expands.
If you've got a trusted key from Joe Smith, and Joe Smith says he
trusts a key belonging to Sara Jones, and Sara Jones says she trusts
the Debian signing key that you're trying to verify, then you have a
chain of trust from yourself, to Joe, to Sara, to the Debian key.
In practice, very few people do this, because it's a LOT of effort.