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Validating signatures
When you validate a signature, you verify the signer's identity and assess any changes 
made after the document was signed. For an identity to be valid, the signer's certificate, or 
one of its parent certificates that was used to issue the signer's certificate, must be in your 
list of trusted identities, and it must not have expired or been revoked. (See 
When you open a document, its signatures are validated automatically, unless you turn off 
a preference setting. The verification status appears on the document page and in the 
Signatures tab. If you don't have the signer's certificate, the signature validity is unknown. 
Third-party signature handlers may verify identities using other methods. You can specify 
whether document-specific settings or default settings are used for verifying documents, 
check to see if certification has been revoked, add time stamps to signatures, and change 
other validation settings. (See 
To validate a signature:
1.  Open the PDF document containing the signature.
2.  In the signature field or in the Signatures tab, check whether the warning sign icon 
 
appears next to the signature. If this icon appears, the document may have been modified 
after it was signed.
3.  Select the signature in the Signatures tab, and then choose Validate Signature from the 
Options menu. The Signature Validation Status describes the signature status.
4.  Click Legal Notice to learn more about the legal restrictions of this signature, and then 
click OK.
5.  If the status is unknown, click Signature Properties, click the Signer tab, and then click 
Show Certificate to view the details of the certificate. If you're working with self-signed 
digital IDs, confirm that the certificate details are valid. (See 
If the document has more than one signature, you can view a copy of the signed version in 
a separate document window. (See 
.) 
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