Leonard Rosenthol <lrosenth <at> adobe.com> writes: > > Sure - the certificate is valid and legal, that's not the issue. > > It's about trust. NOT that I trust the validity of the certificate but that I trust the OWNER of the certificate. > > Let's say that the certificate is from ACME Corp. I don't have any relationship with ACME, so therefore I > don't trust them or any document that they send me, and don't wish them to do things behind my back. > > But if the certificate was from Adobe Systems, where I work, I would certainly put them in my trusted list of > certificate and then allow their documents to work as expected. > > If you are doing this in a corporate setting, for your employees, you can easily "push" the certificate and > the trust out to them... > > Leonard >
Ahh...yes... this is what I am trying to do. I should've mentioned this earlier. My apologies. I am doing this in a Corporate setting. The users are our own employees in the same intranet setting. In this case how do I "push" the certificate and the trust out to them? I thought if I email a user the exported certificate in .pfx format and make them import it , they should be seeing it as a trusted certificate in thier IE browser but it did not work and they still get the pop-up. Any ideas? -Sam ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Are you an open source citizen? Join us for the Open Source Bridge conference! Portland, OR, June 17-19. Two days of sessions, one day of unconference: $250. Need another reason to go? 24-hour hacker lounge. Register today! http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;215844324;13503038;v?http://opensourcebridge.org _______________________________________________ iText-questions mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/itext-questions Buy the iText book: http://www.1t3xt.com/docs/book.php Check the site with examples before you ask questions: http://www.1t3xt.info/examples/ You can also search the keywords list: http://1t3xt.info/tutorials/keywords/
