Leonard, Leonard Rosenthol wrote > Our customers asked that we clearly identify a PDF that contained LTV (vs. > one that did not). That was that term that we determined was simple and > clear in conveying that message.
IMHO it conveys the wrong message. Being XXX-enabled generally is an on/off matter, an item remains XXX-enabled until someone explicitly XXX-disables it. A PDF stops being LTV-enabled (at least it should stop, otherwise that would be even more misleading) as soon as the validity of the outermost timestamp ends. On the other hand an indication "LTV information sufficient until <DATE>" / "LTV information not sufficient" in my opinion would be very useful. Regards, Michael -- View this message in context: http://itext-general.2136553.n4.nabble.com/LTV-tp4657297p4657317.html Sent from the iText - General mailing list archive at Nabble.com. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Master Visual Studio, SharePoint, SQL, ASP.NET, C# 2012, HTML5, CSS, MVC, Windows 8 Apps, JavaScript and much more. Keep your skills current with LearnDevNow - 3,200 step-by-step video tutorials by Microsoft MVPs and experts. ON SALE this month only -- learn more at: http://p.sf.net/sfu/learnmore_122712 _______________________________________________ iText-questions mailing list iText-questions@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/itext-questions iText(R) is a registered trademark of 1T3XT BVBA. Many questions posted to this list can (and will) be answered with a reference to the iText book: http://www.itextpdf.com/book/ Please check the keywords list before you ask for examples: http://itextpdf.com/themes/keywords.php