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eSignature HUB overview

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Services

Check out these tools designed to support the creation, validation, and management of electronic signatures.

Signature Conformance Checker

The webpage introduces the ETSI Signature Conformance Checker, a free online tool that verifies the conformity of advanced electronic signatures against ETSI standards.

Qualified electronic signature validation algorithm

The webpage outlines an algorithm for validating qualified electronic signatures and seals, as per the eIDAS Regulation, implemented in the DSS open-source library.

eSignature community management

The webpage outlines the DIGITAL eID Knowledge Base, offering up-to-date information on eIDAS-node implementation, eID schemes, and points of contact across European countries.

Digital Signature Service

The webpage introduces DSS, an open-source Java library for creating and validating electronic signatures, ensuring compliance with the eIDAS Regulation and European standards.



Documentation

Read through the documentation to explore the legal framework, standards, and trusted sources for electronic signatures.

European Legislation of eSignature

The webpage outlines the evolution of electronic signature legislation in the EU, from the 1999 eSignature Directive to the 2016 eIDAS Regulation, detailing key changes.

Standards and specifications

The webpage outlines eSignature standards per the eIDAS Regulation, detailing baseline profiles for XAdES, CAdES, and PAdES formats, ensuring EU-wide interoperability.

eSignature list of trusted lists

The webpage defines the List of Trusted Lists (LOTL), explains its legal significance under the eIDAS Regulation, and details its role in providing secure access to EU trusted lists.


faq

eSignature Frequently Asked Questions

An electronic signature is a data in electronic form which is attached to or logically associated with other data in electronic form and which is used by the signatory to sign, where the signatory is a natural person.

Like its handwritten counterpart in the offline world, an electronic signature can be used, for instance, to electronically indicate that the signatory has written the document, agreed with the content of the document, or that the signatory was present as a witness.

In case you want to seal a document as a legal person (e.g. as a business or organisation), you might be instead interested in an electronic seal.

An electronic seal is data in electronic form, which is attached to or logically associated with other data in electronic form to ensure the latter’s origin and integrity, where the creator of a seal is a legal person (unlike the electronic signature that is issued by a natural person).

In this purpose, electronic seals might serve as evidence that an electronic document was issued by a legal person, ensuring certainty of the document’s origin and integrity. Nevertheless, across the European Union, when a transaction requires a qualified electronic seal from a legal person, a qualified electronic signature from the authorised representative of the legal person is equally acceptable.

An ‘electronic signature’ is a legal concept that is defined in eIDAS by the following:

“‘electronic signature’ means data in electronic form which is attached to or logically associated with other data in electronic form and which is used by the signatory to sign;” (eIDAS Article 3.10)

A digital signature, on the other hand, refers to a mathematical and cryptographic concept that is widely used to provide concrete and practical instances of electronic signature. The definition given by ETSI TR 119 100 is that of data appended to, or a cryptographic transformation of a data unit that allows a recipient of the data unit to prove the source and integrity of the data unit and protect against forgery e.g. by the recipient.

These two concepts should be distinguished, as all electronic signatures are not necessarily digital signatures.

The eIDAS Regulation defines three levels of electronic signature: 'simple' electronic signature, advanced electronic signature and qualified electronic signature. The requirements of each level are built on the requirements of the level below it, such that a qualified electronic signature meets the most requirements and a 'simple' electronic signature the least.

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