Electronic signatures for use within financial services, insurance, sales, equipment leasing, legal, human resources, purchase and procurement, real estate, and property management industries and functional areas, among other uses.
Watch full video of Nicole Stiller discuss RSign at Optimize!2020 and RSign at Optimize!2020 in German.
Jungheinrich
RPost’s services built upon RPost’s patented Registered Email™ technologies include services for email proof (delivery, content, official timestamp), email encryption for privacy, and electronic signatures for email, documents and contracts.
For every message transmitted, a return RMail® Registered Receipt™ email, RSign® eSignature certificate, or Digital Seal® authentication timestamp and seal, provides a verifiable, court-admissible record of the email transaction with high evidential weight – proof of precise content (message body and all attachments) and official time the email was sent and received by each recipient. Service features permit additional functions such as providing the recipient the ability to verify email authorship, original content, and original timestamp of transmission, and encrypting for data privacy. The service accomplishes this secure and certified proof of delivery without any extra recipient action or special settings or software on the recipient side.
In summary, services built upon the Registered Email™ technologies, offered inside platforms RMail®, RSign®, and RForms™ as well as under service names Registered Email™ and Digital Seal® services, return:
DELIVERY PROOF: The Registered Receipt™ email provides a record of sending and receiving in accordance with the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act and eIDAS European Union Regulation No 910/2014 Article 43(1), by recording the recipient’s server’s receipt and associating it cryptographically with the original message content, uniform timestamps, and forensic audit trail;
CONTENT PROOF: The encryption and tamper-detectability of a Registered Receipt™ email and Digital Seal® mark preserves the contents of emails and their attachments so as to satisfy process requirements designed under the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act, eIDAS European Union Regulation No 910/2014 Articles 43(1), 35(1), and 36, and evidence law and to establish evidence of content;
OFFICIAL TIME STAMP: The Registered Email™ system link to a trusted, objective, and legal time source per eIDAS European Union Regulation No 910/2014 Articles 41, provides essential and credible evidence in disputes in which the time an email was sent or received is material to the case;
ADMISSIBLE EVIDENCE: Registered Receipt™ emails are court-admissible as to their fact of delivery, as to their legal time of delivery and as to authenticity of content; time stamp, seal, and electronic signature; per eIDAS European Union Regulation No 910/2014 Articles 25(1), 26, 35(1), 36, 41, and 43(1).
FUNCTIONAL EQUIVALENCE: Registered Email™ message receipts, under Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act serves as the functional equivalent of paper mail, which may be used in lieu of return receipt mail, private express mail services, fax logs and similar types of paper mail services; per eIDAS European Union Regulation No 910/2014 Articles 25(1), 26, 35(1), 36, 41, and 43(1).
ELECTRONIC ORIGINAL: A verified Registered Receipt™ email provides a true electronic original of the message content, message attachments, and transmission meta-data including the delivery audit trail.
ELECTRONIC SIGNATURE: The RSign® electronic signature service and RMail® service’s handwritten, mouse-scripted electronic signature service and Digital Seal® service provide for valid electronic signatures on contracts, email, and documents as defined by eIDAS European Union Regulation No 910/2014 Articles 25(1), 26, 35(1), and 36.
ENCRYPTED FOR PRIVACY: Registered Email™ messages that are RPost encrypted comply with privacy requirements and return receipts for auditable proof of compliance.
RPost services implementation of eIDAS EUROPEAN UNION REGULATION No 910/2014, such that RPost technologies are considered to implement:
As further background:
The aspects of eIDAS European Union Regulation No 910/2014 most relevant to the Registered Email™ service are Articles 25(1), 26, 35(1), 36, 41, and 43(1), which are consistent with US and UK e-commerce laws and standards – – Uniform Electronic Transactions Act (UETA), Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act (ESIGN) and British Standards Institute ‘Legal Admissibility’ Code of Practice – BIP 0008. Two independent reviews speak to the strength and integrity of the Registered Email system from a legal perspective under US and European e-commerce laws:
These opinions focus on three areas of electronic law that are most useful for users:
[The two above cited legal opinion reference documents are available for review from RPost]
Comparing United States, United Kingdom, and European eSignature Laws:
In the United States the enforceability of electronic transactions is governed by the Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act (ESIGN), a federal law enacted in 2000 that largely pre-empts inconsistent state law, and the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act (UETA), a uniform state law that was finalized by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in 1999. In the European Union, the enforceability of electronic transactions is governed by the Electronic Signatures Directive adopted in 1999 and the Electronic Commerce Directive adopted in 2000; and in 2016, European Regulation No 910/2014.
The force of these statutes is to remove barriers to the use of electronic transactions and to stipulate that electronic records and electronic signatures cannot be denied legal effectiveness solely on the ground that they are in electronic form.
ESIGN states that, notwithstanding any other rule of law, “a signature, contract, or other record relating to [a] transaction…may not be denied legal effect, validity, or enforceability solely because it is in electronic form.”
UETA provides that “a record or signature, contract, or other record relating to [a] transaction…may not be denied legal effect, validity, or enforceability solely because it is in electronic form.” UETA goes further, affirmatively stating that “if a law requires a record to be in writing, an electronic record satisfies the law,” and “if a law requires a signature, an electronic signature satisfies the law.”
The European Regulation requires member states to “ensure that an electronic signature is not denied legal effectiveness…solely on the grounds that it is in electronic form.”
Specifically, for eIDAS European Union Regulation No 910/2014:
REGULATION (EU) No 910/2014 OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL of 23 July 2014, we consider the following sections to be most relevant in reviewing its service capabilities for compliance and utility with regards to RPost technologies:
The following are some excerpts from REGULATION (EU) No 910/2014, followed by a summary mapping RPost services to the Regulation.
Article 25: Legal effects of electronic signatures
Article 26: Requirements for advanced electronic signatures
An advanced electronic signature shall meet the following requirements:
Article 35: Legal effects of electronic seals
Article 36: Requirements for advanced electronic seals
An advanced electronic seal shall meet the following requirements:
Article 41: Legal effect of electronic time stamps
Article 42: Requirements for qualified electronic time stamps
1. A qualified electronic time stamp shall meet the following requirements:
Article 43: Legal effect of an electronic registered delivery service
United States Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act (ESIGN), a federal law enacted in 2000 that largely pre-empts inconsistent state law, and the United States state-based Uniform Electronic Transactions Act (UETA), a uniform state law that was finalized by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in 1999. European Union laws on the enforceability of electronic transactions is governed by the Electronic Signatures Directive adopted in 1999 and the Electronic Commerce Directive adopted in 2000; and in 2016, European Union Regulation No 910/2014 (eIDAS).
Disclaimer: Neither RPost nor its affiliates provide legal opinions. The information on RPost and its affiliates and products websites is for general information purposes only and is not intended to serve as legal advice or to provide any legal opinions. Laws and regulations change from time to time and neither RPost nor its affiliates guarantee that all of the information on RPost and its affiliates’ websites are current, correct, or with sufficient detail for the purpose of each reader. You should consult your legal counsel for specific jurisdictional details and other issues.