ES 201 733 : 1.1.3
Current
The latest, up-to-date edition.
ELECTRONIC SIGNATURE FORMATS
Hardcopy , PDF
Intellectual Property Rights
Foreword
Introduction
1 Scope
2 References
3 Definitions and abbreviations
3.1 Definitions
3.2 Abbreviations
4 Overview
4.1 Major Parties
4.2 Electronic Signatures and Validation Data
4.3 Forms of Validation Data
4.4 Extended Forms of Validation Data
4.5 Archive Validation Data
4.6 Arbitration
4.7 Validation Process
4.8 Example Validation Sequence
4.9 Additional optional features
5 General Description
5.1 The Signature Policy
5.2 Signed Information
5.3 Components of an Electronic Signature
5.4 Components of Validation Data
5.5 Multiple Signatures
6 Signature Policy and Signature Validation Policy
6.1 Identification of Signature Policy
6.2 General Signature Policy Information
6.3 Recognized Commitment Types
6.4 Rules for Use of Certification Authorities
6.5 Revocation Rules
6.6 Rules for the Use of Roles
6.7 Rules for the Use of Timestamping and Timing
6.8 Rules for Verification Data to be followed
6.9 Rules for Algorithm Constraints and Key Lengths
6.10 Other Signature Policy Rules
6.11 Signature Policy Protection
7 Identifiers and roles
7.1 Signer Name Forms
7.2 TSP Name Forms
7.3 Roles and Signer Attributes
8 Data structure of an Electronic Signature
8.1 General Syntax
8.2 Data Content Type
8.3 Signed-data Content Type
8.4 SignedData Type
8.5 EncapsulatedContentInfo Type
8.6 SignerInfo Type
8.7 CMS Imported Mandatory Present Attributes
8.8 Alternative Signing Certificate Attributes
8.9 Additional Mandatory
8.10 CMS Imported Optional Attributes
8.11 ESS Imported Optional Attributes
8.12 Additional Optional Attributes
8.13 Support for Multiple Signatures
9 Validation Data
9.1 Electronic Signature
9.2 Complete Validation Data
9.3 Extended Validation Data
9.4 Archive Validation Data
10 Other standard data structures
10.1 Public-key Certificate Format
10.2 Certificate Revocation List Format
10.3 OCSP Response Format
10.4 Timestamping Token Format
10.5 Name and Attribute Formats
10.6 Attribute Certificate
11 Signature Policy Specification
11.1 Overall ASN.1 Structure
11.2 Signature Validation Policy
11.3 Common Rules
11.4 Commitment Rules
11.5 Signer and Verifier Rules
11.6 Certificate and Revocation Requirement
11.7 Signing Certificate Trust Conditions
11.8 TimeStamp Trust Conditions
11.9 Attribute Trust Conditions
11.10 Algorithm Constraints
11.11 Signature Policy Extensions
12 Data protocols to interoperate with TSPs
12.1 Operational Protocols
12.2 Management Protocols
13 Security considerations
13.1 Protection of Private Key
13.2 Choice of Algorithms
14 Conformance Requirements
14.1 Signer
14.2 Verifier
14.3 Signature Policy
Annex A (normative): ASN.1 Definitions
A.1 Signature Format Definitions Using X.208 (1988)
ASN.1 Syntax
A.2 Signature Policies Definitions Using X.208 (1988)
ASN.1 Syntax
A.3 Signature Format Definitions Using X.680 (1997)
ASN.1 Syntax
A.4 Signature Policy Definitions Using X.680 (1997)
ASN.1 Syntax
Annex B (informative): Example Structured Contents and MIME
B.1 General Description
B.2 Header Information
B.3 Content Encoding
B.4 Multi-Part Content
B.5 S/MIME
Annex C (informative): Relationship to the European Directive
and EESSI
C.1 Introduction
C.2 Electronic Signatures and the Directive
C.3 ETSI Electronic Signature Formats and the Directive
C.4 EESSI Standards and Classes of Electronic Signature
Annex D (informative): APIs for the Generation and Verification
of Electronic Signatures Tokens
D.1 Data Framing
D.2 IDUP-GSS-APIs defined by the IETF
D.3 CORBA Security interfaces defined by the OMG
Annex E (informative): Cryptographic Algorithms
E.1 Digest Algorithms
E.2 Digital Signature Algorithms
Annex F (informative): Guidance on Naming
F.1 Allocation of Names
F.2 Providing Access to Registration Information
F.3 Naming Schemes
Bibliography
History
Studies the requirements for standardization of digital signatures in telecommunication applications. Shall establish which areas of digital signature standardization should be concentrated on for the requirements of the different European member states, taking account of the emerging national positions on data security, electronic commerce, lawful interception and trusted third parties' requirements.
Committee |
SEC
|
DocumentType |
Standard
|
Pages |
96
|
PublisherName |
European Telecommunications Standards Institute
|
Status |
Current
|
TR 102 041 : 1.1.1 | SIGNATURE POLICIES REPORT |
ISO 7498-2:1989 | Information processing systems Open Systems Interconnection Basic Reference Model Part 2: Security Architecture |
ISO/IEC 13888-1:2009 | Information technology Security techniques Non-repudiation Part 1: General |
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