-[GnuPG](http://www.gnupg.org/)'s keyring manipulation capabilities and public
-keyservers to generate files that OpenSSH will accept and handle as intended.
-
-This offers users of OpenSSH an effective PKI, including the possibility for
-key transitions, transitive identifications, revocations, and expirations. It
-also actively invites broader participation in the
-[OpenPGP](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Openpgp) [web of
-trust](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_of_trust).
-
-Under the Monkeysphere, both parties to an OpenSSH connection (client and
-server) have a responsibility to explicitly designate who they trust to certify
-the identity of the other party. This trust designation is explicitly indicated
-with traditional GPG keyring trust model. No modification is made to the SSH
-protocol on the wire (it continues to use raw RSA public keys), and it should
-work with unpatched OpenSSH software.
-
-Monkeysphere does not modify ssh in any way, and ssh can be used "out
-of the box". Monkeysphere is a set of tools that manages keys in the
-known\_hosts and authorized\_keys files that ssh uses for connection
-authentication.
+[GnuPG](http://www.gnupg.org/)'s keyring manipulation capabilities and
+public keyserver communication to manage the keys that OpenSSH uses
+for connection authentication.
+
+Under the Monkeysphere, both parties to an OpenSSH connection (client
+and server) explicitly designate who they trust to certify the
+identity of the other party. These trust designations are explicitly
+indicated with traditional GPG keyring trust models. Monkeysphere
+then manages the keys in the known\_hosts and authorized\_keys files
+directly, in such a way that is completely transparent to SSH. No
+modification is made to the SSH protocol on the wire (it continues to
+use raw RSA public keys), and no modification is needed to the OpenSSH
+software.
+
+To emphasize: *no SSH modification is required to use the
+Monkeysphere*.
+
+This offers users of OpenSSH an effective PKI, including the
+possibility for key transitions, transitive identifications,
+revocations, and expirations. It also actively invites broader
+participation in the [OpenPGP](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Openpgp)
+[web of trust](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_of_trust).