<p>Hi guys,
Could you help the dumb grad student for a second? I downloaded Photoshop from FAS, and apparently to install it, I need a program called Key Verify. I installed that program (and the FAS VPN client, since I live off-campus), but it won’t start up – it’s telling me that it can’t contact the key server.</p>
<p>Does anybody have any hints? The FAS computing services website is phenomenally unhelpful.</p>
<p>VPN can get pretty tricky sometimes, especially when firewalls and routers are involved. I’d say to forward the neccesary ports, make sure all relevant firewalls are acceptably configured, and make sure that your antivirus isn’t causing any problems.</p>
<p>Again, VPN is incredibly stupid sometimes. You should give the Harvard guys a call.</p>
<p>Well, in the grand tradition of posting questions on the internet, I figured it out myself about five minutes after posting.
I had the key program set up incorrectly, but I fixed it and am now photoshopping away!</p>
<p>Molliebatmit, care to share what you’ve done? I tried to install/uninstall KeyVerify a couple of times myself, and I’ve had similar problems.</p>
<p>The default server to which it connects is just “keyserver”, and I changed it to “keyserver.fas.harvard.edu”. I may have only had to do that because I’m off-campus. I hope that helps!</p>
<p>Hi, I’m running into that problem too, but I’m not sure how you how you changed the default server to which the program connects. I installed the Sassafras K2 Client and ran the application keyvfy32, but all it does is pop up an error message saying, “The network KeyServer “keyserver.fas.harvard.edu” is not responding. Please make sure you have a current version of KeyAccess, and that the KeyServer name is entered correctly.”</p>
<p>I’m not sure what’s wrong or how to change any of the settings…</p>
<p>I’m having the same issue, same error message. Anyone know a solution??</p>