It's hard to know when a keysigning is "done". People sometimes take a long time to get around to signing keys, and others forget to upload them. The obvious answer of "When everybody has signed everybody else" is wrong because not everybody met everybody else.

Each entry on this page lists how many non-reciprocated signatures each person has received. This is a better, but not good metric. There's always a degree of asymmetry involved in a keysigning; some people make mistakes (sign people they didn't meet, or neglect to place a tick by someone they did meet).

So I've placed an arbitrary cut-off at 5 non-reciprocated signatures. If you're on this list and don't think you should be, check that all your signatures are available from the pgp.net servers. A good place to check your asymmetric signatures is at Wotsap. Put your key ID into the "Key statistics" box and look at the first group of keys ("This key is signed by, excluding cross-signs:").

Some of the people listed either can or will not reciprocate signatures (some reasons I'm aware of: forgotten passphrase, unable to sign v4 keys, does not sign with that key). Most people listed here though either haven't got round to it yet or have got round to it, and haven't uploaded their signatures. If anyone's having problems signing keys, you can always mail me and ask for help.

NameKey IDSlacknessExcuse
Micah B. Parrish <micah.parrish@hp.com>C30EDC0016 keys
Nigel Croxon <nigel.croxon@hp.com>151E55289 keys
Ray Lanza <ray.lanza@hp.com>6E4522638 keys
Bdale Garbee <bdale@gag.com>F2CF01A86 keys
Grant Grundler <iod00d@hp.com>C734F6006 keysForgotten passphrase
Aron Griffis <agriffis@n01se.net>20104EB06 keys
matt anderson <mra@hp.com>C344DBA35 keys