Adobe 22002486 Digital Signature User Guide - Page 91

Document Locking, Document Defensibility

Page 91 highlights

Acrobat 9 Family of Products Security Feature User Guide Signing Documents Signing With a Certification Signature 91  Because certification is designed to carry more legal weight than an uncertified document, greater attention to the content and process is typically warranted.  Certification signatures are automatically validated even if the application preference to automatically validate signatures is turned off. Document Locking Certification limits what a recipient can do with a document. Some actions are locked automatically, and some are locked by the certifier. For example, during certification the signer can choose from the following options:  No changes allowed  Form fill-in and digital signatures  Annotations, form fill-in, and digital signatures General editing, adding or removing pages, and so on are automatically prevented. Any changes that are explicitly locked by the certifier or automatically prohibited by the application invalidate the certifier's signature and revokes the document's certification. Document Defensibility Acrobat has a notion of a document's defensibility which is defined by the features that appear in the legal attestation dictionary, described in Section 8.7.4 of the PDF Reference manual. Note that aside from when a signer is certifying, Acrobat does not actively inform the user about the document's legal defensibility. In any case, a document's legal defensibility improves if it does not contain content that threatens the signer's ability to see what they are signing as well as their ability to certify that what the document recipient sees is the same as that which was certified. Such content includes JavaScript, multimedia, and so on. It is the certifier's responsibility to either remove that content or attest to the fact that such content should be retained. Hazardous content is revealed to users in two ways:  Acrobat helps the signer identify such content by scanning the document during the certification signing process. The signer is given the option to embed an attestation in the document about that content that explains why it is present. This behavior is unique to certification signatures and does not apply to approval signatures.  Document recipients use the View Document Integrity Properties button to launch the same content scanning process that was automatically launched when the certifier signed. If the document is certified, the process generates a report that includes the certifier's attestation, if any. Content that has been explicitly trusted by the certifier also appears on the signature tab under Trusted Content (Figure 63).

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Acrobat 9 Family of Products
Signing Documents
Security Feature User Guide
Signing With a Certification Signature
91
Because certification is designed to carry more legal weight than an uncertified document, greater
attention to the content and process is typically warranted.
Certification signatures are automatically validated even if the application preference to automatically
validate signatures is turned off.
Document Locking
Certification limits what a recipient can do with a document. Some actions are locked automatically, and
some are locked by the certifier. For example, during certification the signer can choose from the following
options:
No changes allowed
Form fill-in and digital signatures
Annotations, form fill-in, and digital signatures
General editing, adding or removing pages, and so on are automatically prevented. Any changes that are
explicitly locked by the certifier or automatically prohibited by the application invalidate the certifier’s
signature and revokes the document’s certification.
Document Defensibility
Acrobat has a notion of a document’s defensibility which is defined by the features that appear in the legal
attestation dictionary, described in Section 8.7.4 of the
PDF Reference
manual. Note that aside from when a
signer is certifying, Acrobat does not actively inform the user about the document’s legal defensibility.
In any case, a document’s legal defensibility improves if it does not contain content that threatens the
signer’s ability to see what they are signing as well as their ability to certify that what the document
recipient sees is the same as that which was certified. Such content includes JavaScript, multimedia, and so
on. It is the certifier’s responsibility to either remove that content or attest to the fact that such content
should be retained.
Hazardous content is revealed to users in two ways:
Acrobat helps the signer identify such content by scanning the document during the certification
signing process. The signer is given the option to embed an attestation in the document about that
content that explains why it is present. This behavior is unique to certification signatures and does not
apply to approval signatures.
Document recipients use the
View Document Integrity Properties
button to launch the same
content scanning process that was automatically launched when the certifier signed. If the document
is certified, the process generates a report that includes the certifier’s attestation, if any. Content that
has been explicitly trusted by the certifier also appears on the signature tab under
Trusted Content
(
Figure 63
).