diff --git a/helpcontent2/source/text/shared/guide/digital_signatures.xhp b/helpcontent2/source/text/shared/guide/digital_signatures.xhp
index 94f2908f5f..9a22746470 100755
--- a/helpcontent2/source/text/shared/guide/digital_signatures.xhp
+++ b/helpcontent2/source/text/shared/guide/digital_signatures.xhp
@@ -7,9 +7,9 @@
*
* $RCSfile: digital_signatures.xhp,v $fileonly,v $
*
- * $Revision: 1.10 $
+ * $Revision: 1.11 $
*
- * last change: $Author: vg $ $Date: 2007-09-21 10:03:20 $
+ * last change: $Author: ihi $ $Date: 2007-11-23 17:34:15 $
*
* The Contents of this file are made available subject to
* the terms of GNU Lesser General Public License Version 2.1.
@@ -58,7 +58,7 @@
When you receive a signed document, and the software reports that the signature is valid, this does not mean that you can be absolutely sure that the document is the same that the sender has sent. Signing documents with software certificates is not a perfectly secure method. Numerous ways are possible to circumvent the security features.
Example: Think about someone wants to camouflage his identity to be a sender from your bank. He can easily get a certificate using a false name, then send you any signed e-mail pretending he is working for your bank. You will get that e-mail, and the e-mail or the document within has the "valid signed" icon.
Do not trust the icon. Inspect and verify the certificates.
-The validation of a signature is not a legally binding assurement of any kind.
+The validation of a signature is not a legally binding guarantee of any kind.
On Windows operating systems, the Windows features of validating a signature are used. On Solaris and Linux systems, files that are supplied by Thunderbird, Mozilla or Firefox are used. You must ensure that the files that are in use within your system are really the original files that were supplied by the original developers. For malevolent intruders, there are numerous ways to replace original files with other files that they supply.
The messages about validation of a signature that you see in %PRODUCTNAME are the messages that the validation files return. The %PRODUCTNAME software has no way to ensure that the messages reflect the true status of any certificate. The %PRODUCTNAME software only displays the messages that other files that are not under control of %PRODUCTNAME report. There is no legal responsibility of %PRODUCTNAME that the displayed messages reflect the true status of a digital signature.
Get a certificate
@@ -76,7 +76,7 @@
Open your Web browser's preferences dialog, select the Privacy & Security tab page, click on Certificates - Manage Certificates.
-Import your new root certificate, then select and edit the certificate. Enable the root certificate to be trusted at least for web and e-mail access. This ensures that the certificate can sign your documents. You may edit any intermediate certificate in the same way, but it is not mandatory for signing documents.
+Import your new root certificate, then select and edit the certificate. Enable the root certificate to be trusted at least for web and email access. This ensures that the certificate can sign your documents. You may edit any intermediate certificate in the same way, but it is not mandatory for signing documents.
When you have edited the new certificates, restart %PRODUCTNAME.
@@ -123,7 +123,41 @@
When you open the Basic IDE that contains signed macros, you see an icon
icon
- in the status bar. You can double-click the icon in the status bar to view the certificate.
+ in the status bar. You can double-click the icon in the status bar to view the certificate.WebDAV see issue 32935main dialog IDs are here to lead the user initially to this help pageExamine certificate button
+Click to open the View Certificate dialog.Accept this certificate temporarily for this session radio button
+Choose this setting to accept the certificate until you exit %PRODUCTNAME.Do not accept this certificate and do not connect to this Web site radio button
+Choose this setting to cancel the connection.
+Opening a document using WebDAV over HTTPS
+In %PRODUCTNAME, you can open and save documents that are stored on a WebDAV server, using the secure HTTPS protocol.
+You must use the %PRODUCTNAME file dialogs to use WebDAV over HTTPS.
+
+
+Choose - Tools - Options - %PRODUCTNAME - General
. Ensure that Use %PRODUCTNAME dialogs is enabled. Click OK to close the dialog.
+
+
+Choose - File - Open
.
+
+
+In the File name box, enter the path to the WebDAV folder. For example, enter - https://192.168.1.1/webfolder
to open a secure connection to the WebDAV server at the IP address 192.168.1.1, and to list the contents of the - webfolder
folder.
+
+
+The first time you connect to a WebDAV server, you see the "Website Certified by an Unknown Authority" dialog.
+You should click the Examine Certificate button and examine the certificate.
+If you accept the certificate, choose "Accept this certificate temporarily for this session" and click OK. Now you can open and save files from the WebDAV server without further questions, until you exit %PRODUCTNAME.
+If you do not trust the certificate, click Cancel.
+
+
+If you did accept the certificate, you can now select the file name or file names you want to open and click Open.
+
+
+If there is a mismatch of the domain name given in the certificate and the domain name you entered in the file dialog, then you see a dialog that allows you to choose from any of the following options:
+View Certificate - Opens the View Certificate dialog.
+Continue - If you are sure both domains are the same, click the Continue button.
+Cancel Connection - Cancels the connection.
+If you click Continue, you may see a dialog that asks you to enter your user name and password.user name
+Enter your user name to log on to the WebDAV server.password
+Enter your password.remember password till end of session
+If you enable Remember password till end of session, your password will be remembered for subsequent WebDAV connections until you exit %PRODUCTNAME.