On 2012-04-09 11:21, helpcrypto helpcrypto wrote:
>> IMHO it depends quite a bit on what your target audience is.
> 
> Document signing on a web browser, its *always* done using a java applets.
> 
> Tax payment, traffic bills, more taxes...in hour case, official
> documents signed by the "ministry" autorized people.

That's interesting!  You might want to look into this:

http://www.w3.org/2011/11/webcryptography-charter.html

  "The ability to select credentials and sign statements can be necessary to 
perform
   high-value transactions such as those involved in finance, corporate 
security, and
   identity-related claims about personal data"


I'm rather skeptical about this group's ability creating a standard for web 
signatures.
FWIW, I have since *very* long time back toyed with a web standards proposal

    http://webpki.org/papers/wasp/wasp-tutorial.pdf

which I may turn into real when/if I succeed with the enrollment/keystore 
standard
that I [nowadays...] consider having *much* higher priority than signatures:

http://webpki.org/papers/keygen2/sks-keygen2-exec-level-presentation.pdf

Anders
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