TR 102 045 : 1.1.1
Current
The latest, up-to-date edition.
ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES AND INFRASTRUCTURES (ESI); SIGNATURE POLICY FOR EXTENDED BUSINESS MODEL
Hardcopy , PDF
English
Intellectual Property Rights
Foreword
Introduction
1 Scope
2 References
3 Definitions and abbreviations
3.1 Definitions
3.2 Abbreviations
4 Overview
4.1 Background research
4.2 Implications of the Electronic Signatures Directive
1999/93/EC
4.3 Extended business model
4.4 Signature scenarios
4.5 Introduction to signature policies
5 Analysis of signature issues
5.1 Transactional context/field of application
5.2 Formalities of signing/intention to sign
5.3 Identity of signer
5.4 Roles and attributes of signer
5.5 Signature commitment types
5.6 Timing and sequence
5.7 Location
5.8 Longevity
5.9 Technical and security considerations
5.10 Multiple signatures
6 Formalities of signing
7 Roles and attributes
7.1 Meaning of "role" "attribute" and "privilege"
7.2 Claimed versus certified business roles or attributes
7.3 Authority as an attribute
7.4 Categorization of roles
8 Commitment types in electronic signatures
8.1 Real world commitment types
8.2 Electronic commitment types
9 Multiple signatures
9.1 Parallel signatures
9.2 Sequential (parallel) signatures
9.3 Embedded signatures
9.4 Multiple signature management
9.5 Multiple signature validation
10 Signature policies
10.1 Legal effect of signature policies
10.2 Implicit or express signature polices
10.3 Drafting a signature policy
10.4 Significant elements of a signature policy
10.5 Illustrations for signature policy rules
11 Conclusions
11.1 Recommended changes to the signature policy formats
11.2 Recommendations for future work
Annex A: Business scenario descriptions
A.1 General
A.2 Purchase of life insurance
A.3 Supply chain (illustrated via linked service level
agreements)
A.4 Land purchase
Annex B: Signature commitment categories
Annex C: Model/specimen policy document
Annex D: Bibliography
History
Discusses signature policies to be used in the management of multiple signatures within extended business models. The concept of a signature policy is an important element for the establishment of a common basis for electronic signatures.
Committee |
ESI
|
DocumentType |
Standard
|
Pages |
63
|
PublisherName |
European Telecommunications Standards Institute
|
Status |
Current
|
TR 102 272 : 1.1.1 | ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES AND INFRASTRUCTURES (ESI); ASN.1 FORMAT FOR SIGNATURE POLICIES |
TR 102 206 : 1.1.3 | MOBILE COMMERCE (M-COMM); MOBILE SIGNATURE SERVICE; SECURITY FRAMEWORK |
TR 102 038 : 1.1.1 | TC SECURITY - ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES AND INFRASTRUCTURES (ESI); XML FORMAT FOR SIGNATURE POLICIES |
ISO/IEC 13888-1:2009 | Information technology Security techniques Non-repudiation Part 1: General |
TR 102 044 : 1.1.1 | ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES AND INFRASTRUCTURES (ESI); REQUIREMENTS FOR ROLE AND ATTRIBUTE CERTIFICATES |
TS 101 733 : 2.2.1 | ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES AND INFRASTRUCTURES (ESI); CMS ADVANCED ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES (CADES) |
Access your standards online with a subscription
Features
-
Simple online access to standards, technical information and regulations.
-
Critical updates of standards and customisable alerts and notifications.
-
Multi-user online standards collection: secure, flexible and cost effective.