source/text/shared/guide/digitalsign_send.xhp |    2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

New commits:
commit fc5a433b247927c4b134d7d6028c68837e3e003d
Author: Andrea Gelmini <andrea.gelm...@gelma.net>
Date:   Wed Feb 28 01:34:29 2018 +0100

    Fix typo
    
    Change-Id: I03ac8de6528ed33d07fe91e52f50964eb7b74b0d
    Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/50478
    Reviewed-by: Michael Stahl <mst...@redhat.com>
    Tested-by: Michael Stahl <mst...@redhat.com>

diff --git a/source/text/shared/guide/digitalsign_send.xhp 
b/source/text/shared/guide/digitalsign_send.xhp
index 4216a412d..941fe9614 100644
--- a/source/text/shared/guide/digitalsign_send.xhp
+++ b/source/text/shared/guide/digitalsign_send.xhp
@@ -56,7 +56,7 @@
 
     <paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id461519763996407" 
xml-lang="en-US">Your digital signature private key will usually be generated 
and securely stored by Windows as part of the signature-issuance ceremony.  
Once the issuing Certificate Authority authority is satisfied that your 
computer produced the private key and you have satisfied any other 
identification requirements, the corresponding public key is signed by the 
Certificate Authority.  (For personal keys obtained over the Internet, the 
private key is generated by your browser and it is not shared with the 
Certificate Authority.)</paragraph>
 
-    <paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id181519764008387" xml-lang="en-US">If 
a private key is received by other means or you transfer it from another 
computer, you can install it on your Windows PC by double-clicking on the 
private key certificate and providing any required password.  This private key 
may be known to others (such as an organizational or governmental security 
administation) depending on how it was issued to you.</paragraph>
+    <paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id181519764008387" xml-lang="en-US">If 
a private key is received by other means or you transfer it from another 
computer, you can install it on your Windows PC by double-clicking on the 
private key certificate and providing any required password.  This private key 
may be known to others (such as an organizational or governmental security 
administration) depending on how it was issued to you.</paragraph>
 
     <paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id21519764016831" 
xml-lang="en-US">Public keys of others that you use to verify documents signed 
by them and to encrypt by digital signature for their eyes only tend to be 
retained on your system by the software products that provide confirmation of 
those signatures and that support encryption using public keys of others.  In 
some cases you will need to manage those public-key certificates 
yourself.</paragraph>
 
_______________________________________________
Libreoffice-commits mailing list
libreoffice-comm...@lists.freedesktop.org
https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/libreoffice-commits

Reply via email to