Introduction to Digital and Electronic Signatures Using JavaScript

Many documents use the terms electronic signatures and digital signatures interchangeably, but they have fundamental differences and distinct advantages. An electronic signature refers to a method of signing documents or data electronically, while a digital signature utilizes advanced cryptographic techniques to add an extra layer of security to electronically signed documents.

Nutrient facilitates paperless signing workflows with the Electronic Signatures and Digital Signatures components. These are two components that can be licensed separately and don’t depend on each other.

Electronic Signatures

The Electronic Signatures component lets users create signatures from ink drawings, bitmap images, and text. It includes a built-in UI for adding and deleting signatures in documents with or without a signature form element. Annotations are used under the hood to execute the electronic signing process. The Electronic Signatures component also contains support for programmatically marking ink or image annotations as signatures. See our guide on adding an electronic signature to learn more.

Electronic Signatures introduces support for three different modes of adding signatures: draw, image, and type. This allows you to integrate a feature-rich signing experience inside your app. Please see our guide on customizing the signature user interface to learn about available API options.

You can also implement callbacks to provide signature storage so that users can reuse their electronic signatures across documents.

Nutrient offers support for simple electronic signatures (SES). This type of signature can be as straightforward as writing your name under an email and suffices for many everyday use cases.

Digital signatures

A digital signature provides proof of identity by generating a unique digital fingerprint based on cryptography. This secure verification of identity is facilitated through a trusted third party known as a Certificate Authority (CA).

This signing approach is different from the one supported by electronic signatures, since digital signatures have a unique fingerprint identifying the signer and are reliable proof of a document’s origin and protection against modification by third parties. Check out our Digital Signatures guides for more information.

Nutrient offers support for the following kinds of digital signatures, as defined by regulations:

- Advanced electronic signatures (AdES) — A type of digital signature that offers a higher level of security and legal validity compared to a simple electronic signature. These signatures use cryptographic techniques to ensure the integrity of a signed document and verify the identity of the signer.

- Qualified electronic signatures (QES) — The most secure and legally binding form of digital signatures. They’re issued by trusted certification authorities and require the use of secure hardware or software to create and verify a signature. Qualified electronic signatures are typically used for highly sensitive transactions and comply with strict regulatory standards. Refer to our GlobalSign DSS integration guide for an example of implementing QES.

As explained before, simple electronic signatures and digital signatures are inherently different, but they can, under some circumstances, work together — for example, by using the Electronic Signatures UI to let the user create a drawing or select an image, and then using this for the appearance of a generated digital signature. To learn more, see our guide on using Electronic Signatures and Digital Signatures together.

Information

For more information on digital signatures, refer to the Digital Signatures in a PDF guide by Adobe. You should also take a look at the 12.8 Digital Signatures section of Adobe’s PDF 1.7 specification. For general information on how digital signatures work, please read the digital signature entry on Wikipedia.

The table below provides a summary of the various types of electronic signatures, along with their respective advantages and disadvantages.

Simple electronic signature Advanced electronic signature Qualified electronic signature
Description Electronically signing a document can be done by simply placing one or more signature annotations (referred to as eSignatures or wet signatures) on a document. This is a good and simple visual way to electronically sign a document, but it isn’t acceptable for the majority of documents that are usually signed. In a way, this is an equivalent of a handwritten signature in the digital document space. When an electronically signed document needs an additional layer of security, this is possible through the process of digitally signing a document with certificates. This is done with the power of public key cryptography, and it requires a certification body to guarantee the short-term or long-term validity of a document, as well as the validity of the certificates and what they represent. Different standards mandate different signature requirements and possibilities. This is an advanced electronic signature that was created with a qualified signature creation device (for example, a smart card) and uses a qualified certificate.
Requirements Visible electronic signature that can be customized Viewing, validating,* and/or creating digital signatures that adhere to a specific standard (e.g. CMS, PAdES, CAdES) — Specific long-term validation requirements (LTV, timestamps) Valid per EU regulations
Pros ✅ No configuration
✅ Easy to implement by builders
✅ Easy to use by end users
✅ Can detect changes to the document
✅ Gives guarantee that the document was signed by an entity
✅ With a secure timestamp, we can add “proof of existence”
✅ They are legally equivalent to handwritten signatures in the EU
Cons ❌ Extremely hard or impossible to prove intent to sign
❌ Impossible to prove authenticity of the document
❌ Impossible to prove authenticity of the signer
❌ Impossible to determine when a document was signed
❌ More difficult to configure (requires certificates and keys) ❌ Requires a special kind of certificate issued by trusted organizations

Older signatures functionality

For Nutrient licenses obtained in April 2021 or earlier, limited signature functionality is included with the Annotations component. This older signature functionality will continue to be maintained and supported. However, we recommend using Electronic Signatures for new Nutrient integrations. Please read our migration guide to learn how to move from the older signatures functionality to Electronic Signatures.