Sharing certificates with others, Get certificates from other users, Add a certificate from email – Adobe Acrobat XI User Manual

Page 375

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Security

Last updated 1/14/2015

Sharing certificates with others

Businesses that use certificates for secure workflows often store certificates on a directory server that participants can
search to expand their list of trusted identities.

When you receive a certificate from someone, you can add it to your list of trusted identities. You can set your trust
settings to trust all digital signatures and certified documents created with a specific certificate. You can also import
certificates from a certificate store, such as the Windows certificate store. A certificate store often contains numerous
certificates issued by different certification authorities.

For complete information on sharing certificates, see the Digital Signatures Guide (PDF) at

www.adobe.com/go/learn_acr_security_en

.

Note: Third-party security providers usually validate identities by using proprietary methods. Or, they integrate their
validation methods with Acrobat. If you use a third-party security provider, see the documentation for the third-party
provider.

Get certificates from other users

Certificates that you receive from others are stored in a list of trusted identities. This list resembles an address book and
enables you to validate the signatures of these users on any documents you receive from them.

Add a certificate from email

When a contact sends a certificate to you in email, it is displayed as an import/export methodology file attachment.

1

Double-click the email attachment, then click Set Contact Trust in the dialog box that appears.

2

Select the contact and click Import.

3

Supply any password required and click Next. Click OK to view the import details, and then click OK again.

4

Choose the location and click Next. Then click Finish.

5

Click Set Contact Trust again to see that the contact has been added to Certificates. Select the certificate to view
Details and Trust information.

• For Trust, select the options desired.

• Use This Certificate As A Trusted Root only if it is required to validate a digital signature. Once you make a

certificate a trust anchor, you prevent revocation checking on it (or any certificate in the chain).

• To allow actions that can be a security risk, click Certified Documents, and then select the options you want to

allow:

Dynamic Content

Includes FLV and SWF files as well as external links.

Embedded High Privilege JavaScript

Trusts embedded scripts.

Privileged System Operations

Includes networking, printing, and file access

Add a certificate from a digital signature in a PDF

You can safely add a certificate to your trusted identities from a signed PDF by first verifying the fingerprint with the
originator or the certificate.

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