On 16-08-2010 11:51, Steve Roylance wrote:
Ivo,
GlobalSign offers Adobe CDS based certificates to the market so we are very
familiar with Adobe Acrobat. If you want to create a simple PKCS#12 self
signed certificate and you have Acrobat Pro, then go into the 'Advanced'
settings menu 'Security Settings' and simply click on 'Add ID' and a wizard
will guide you through the process to end up with a PKCS#12 or an exportable
certificate in your Windows PC cert store. It's very easy.
Nice feature for test signatures, but I don't think that's what the
OP wanted (see below).
If you ever then need a real CDS (Recognizable by PDF reader worldwide)
certificate GlobalSign would be pleased to help get one for you.
Nice plug, but I guess the OP wanted to issue locally trusted
certificates signed by an in-house enterprise CA that runs on a Linux
machine and is based on OpenSSL (such as tinyCA, or Red Hat CA).
So maybe you (based on your experience) can tell the rest of us
exactly what makes an Adobe PDF Cert different from a generic X.509
cert?
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