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- Legality in European Union
- What are the relevant laws governing electronic signatures in the European Union?
- What constitutes an electronic signature in the European Union?
- Does the European Union recognize an airSlate electronic signature as a valid type of electronic signature?
- What are some examples of electronic signature use cases?
- Are electronic signatures prohibited or not allowed for any transactions?
- Do parties need to consent to use electronic signatures in the European Union?
- What are the key factors pertaining to the enforcement of electronic signatures in the European Union?
Legality and enforceability of electronic signatures in the European Union*
What are the relevant laws governing electronic signatures in the European Union?
The eIDAS Regulation creates three tiers of electronic signatures discussed below and states that any electronic signature shall not be denied legal effect and admissibility as evidence in legal proceedings solely because it is in electronic form or that it does not meet the requirement of a qualified electronic signature. A qualified electronic signature under EU law shall be granted the same legal standing as a handwritten signature in all EU jurisdictions.
What constitutes an electronic signature in the European Union?
- An electronic signature means “data in electronic form which is attached to or logically associated with other data in electronic form and which is used by the signatory to sign” (Article 3.10) and thus covers the broad category of all electronic signatures.
- An “advanced electronic signature” is a type of electronic signature that must meet specific requirements providing a higher level of signer identification verification, security, and tamper-sealing. In this regard, eIDAS requires that an advanced signature is (Article 3.11):
- uniquely linked to the signer;
- capable of identifying the signer;
- created using signature creation data that the signer can use under their sole control;
- linked to the signed data in such a way that any subsequent change in the data is detectable.
In practice, mainly asymmetric public key cryptography (PKI) systems meet the requirements of this definition. It must, however, be emphasized that eIDAS does not confer specific legal standing to this type of electronic signature that would be different from “simple” electronic signatures.
- A “qualified electronic signature” is the only electronic signature level to have special legal status in EU member states, being legally recognized as the equivalent of a written signature (Article 25.2). A qualified electronic signature is regarded as “an advanced electronic signature that is created by a qualified signature creation device and which is based on a qualified certificate for electronic signatures” (Article 3.12). It must meet advanced electronic signature requirements and be backed by a qualified certificate issued by a trust service provider that is on the EU Trusted List and certified by an EU member state. The trust service provider must verify the identity of the signer and vouch for the authenticity of the resulting signature. A qualified signature creation device must ensure (Annex II):
- The confidentiality of the electronic signature creation data;
- The electronic signature creation data used for electronic signature creation can practically only occur once;
- The electronic signature creation data used for signature creation cannot be derived and the signature is protected against forgery using currently available technology;
- The electronic signature creation data used for signature creation can be reliably protected by the legitimate signatory against use by others.
Additionally, Directive 2000/31/EC (‘e-Commerce Directive’) which sets out a general framework for Member States by which they must ensure that the legal requirements applicable to the contractual process neither create obstacles for the use of electronic contracts nor result in such contracts being deprived of legal standing and validity on account of their having been made by electronic means.
On the basis of this provision, EU Member States have in some cases removed formal requirements preventing the use of electronic means to conclude and enforce contracts under their local laws, and in other cases introduced general provisions to assimilate electronic means to traditional means for concluding and enforcing contracts (“functional equivalence”).
Does the European Union recognize an airSlate electronic signature as a valid type of electronic signature?
The airSlate electronic signature would likely not qualify as an advanced electronic signature and it would not qualify as a qualified electronic signature. Further, EU Member States are free to regulate different types of electronic signatures.
What are some examples of electronic signature use cases?
Are electronic signatures prohibited or not allowed for any transactions?
Do parties need to consent to use electronic signatures in the European Union?
What are the key factors pertaining to the enforcement of electronic signatures in the European Union?
Last updated: May 2021
- What are the relevant laws governing electronic signatures in the European Union?
- What constitutes an electronic signature in the European Union?
- Does the European Union recognize an airSlate electronic signature as a valid type of electronic signature?
- What are some examples of electronic signature use cases?
- Are electronic signatures prohibited or not allowed for any transactions?
- Do parties need to consent to use electronic signatures in the European Union?
- What are the key factors pertaining to the enforcement of electronic signatures in the European Union?