About Digital Signatures
The program uses industrial standard Public-Private Keys to digitally
sign documents to prevent illegal modification or piracy. Essentially,
you first create a key pair – a Public Key and a Private Key; you keep
the Private Key safely while sending the Public Keys to others.
Important: Data encrypted by the private key
can only be decrypted by the public key, and vice versa.
Sign a document using a Private Key:
Since only you own the Private key (used to sign the document), if your
public key (distributed to the public) can decrypt the file successfully,
people can be sure the file is signed by your Private key – in other words
by you. Once signed with the private key, any modification of the document
will break the seal.
Encrypt a document using a Public Key:
You may also send a private document to a friend (encrypting the document
with your friend’s public key) so that no-one else can read it.
Digital signatures can be visible or invisible. Visible signatures appear
in documents and both on the Signatures
panel and the Sign/Certify panel.
Invisible signatures appear only on the Signatures panel and the Sign/Certify
panel.
You can change the appearance of signatures and specify validation and
signature creating choices at File >Options > Signatures, using
the signature preferences panel.
Digital signatures can be time stamped for increased security.