Create a Digital Certificate, and Set Up Adobe Acrobat for Digital Signature Signing

These instructions are intended for Adobe Acrobat Pro/Adobe Acrobat DC licensed(paid) software versions for people who have a need to Create or Edit PDF forms.
For people who simply need to sign documents, Acrobat digital signatures has been superceded by UT Docusign

Basic Instructions

If you don't already have a digital certificate:

  1. go to https://certificates.security.utexas.edu/ to request one
  2. Use your EID and EID password to log in.
  3. Authenticate with Duo. 
  4. Click Request a new certificate and use your @austin.utexas.edu address. Only Office365 supports digital signatures at this time. In rare instances, people request shorter email addresses and use @utexas.edu, or email addresses for their vanity domains such as @starkcenter.org or @meadowscenter.org. You may request a new certificate for those instead if the option is available.
  5. Once your certificate is created it will direct you over to stache https://stache.utexas.edu/ where you will also have to authenticate wit your EID, EID password and Duo.
  6. The entry with your digital certificate will be named encryption and mail signing cert in stache. Click on the newest dated entry
  7. Download your mail encryption certificate .P12.
  8. The entry with your digital certicate has a password. you will need that password from the Encrypted file password field to import the certificate into your Acrobat Digital IDs. Select the whole password with your mouse and hit Command-C or go to the Edit menu and choose Copy.

Then

For MAC:

  1. Open Acrobat by clicking on it if it's in your dock, or by going to your Applications folder and double clicking Acrobat Pro/Acrobat Pro DC/Acrobat Reader DC
  2. Go to the Acrobat Menu and slide down to Preferences
  3. Scroll down to Signatures and click on it
  4. in the Identities & Trusted Certificates section, click More
  5. Click Add ID (ID card icon with plus symbol)
  6. Leave the default selection of My existing digital ID from: A file and click Next
  7. Browse to your Downloads folder, click on the .P12 file, and click Open
  8. Enter the password from the Stache field labeled Encrypted file password or paste the previously copied password (Command-V or choose Paste from up top in the Edit menu)
  9. Click Next
  10. Click Finish
  11. Click Close
  12. Open the application Keychain Access found in the Utilities folder in Applications in Finder
  13. If prompted, use your login password to unlock Keychain Access.
  14. In the left-hand column, select login
  15. In the row at the top of the window, select My Certificates
  16. Drag and drop the .P12 file into My Certificates
  17. Paste (Command-V or choose Paste from up top in the Edit menu) the Encrypted file password you copied from Stache into the Password prompt.
  18. Click on the > symbol beside the new certificate.
  19. Double-click your email address that just dropped down.
  20. Click Access Control
  21. Click the + button
  22. Navigate to Application to Adobe Acrobat 2020 and select Adobe Acrobat
  23. Click Add
  24. Click Save Changes
  25. Enter your login password
  26. Close Keychain Access
  27. Go to the Acrobat Menu and slide down to Preferences
  28. Scroll down to Trust Manager and click on it.  The reason for these next steps is listed towards the bottom of the wiki under Update the Adobe Trusted Root Certificates To Allow For Successful Validation of UT Employee Signed Documents
  29. Tick the box Load Trusted Root Certificates From An Adobe AATL Server. This option allows Acrobat or Reader to automatically download trust settings from an Adobe server. These trust settings ensure that the user or organization associated with the certificate has met the assurance levels of the Adobe Approved Trust List (AATL) program.
  30. Tick the box Ask Before Updating.
  31. Click Update Now.
  32. You may repeat these steps for the Automatic European Union Trusted Lists (EUTL) updates.
  33. Click OK
  34. Restart Adobe Acrobat/Reader to put the change into effect.
  35. Reopen Acrobat
  36. Go to the Acrobat Menu and slide down to Preferences
  37. Scroll down to Signatures and click on it
  38. in the Identities & Trusted Certificates section, click More
  39. Click the ID that has your FIrstName LastName <emailaddress>. There are two.  Select the one that has Mac Keychain Store under the Storage Mechanism column
  40. At the top, click Certificate Details.  The following steps will resolve all the certificate path errors.
  41. At the left column, select The University of Texas at Austin RSA CA
  42. Click the Trust tab
  43. Click Add to Trusted Certificates... and OK on the Adobe prompt
  44. On the pop-up window, make sure to tick all four boxes including the one that says Use this certificate as a trusted root.
  45. Click Trust
  46. Click OK
  47. Click OK again.  The certificate path should be valid now.
  48. up in the Usage Options heading (pencil icon), slide down and click Use for signing. Do this again for Use for Certifying and Use for Encryption. Note: Acrobat Reader DC will only have the Use for signing option.
  49. Click Close
  50. Click OK
  51. To test it out, you can open a PDF document and sign a document.  If prompted by Keychain Access, enter your login password and click Always Allow.  If you press enter, it will only allow it once.

For Windows:

  1. Double clicking the downloaded .p12 file will open Certificate Import Wizard.
    Go through the wizard. You shouldn't have to tick off anything. Do not check the box to force strong protection or it will make you enter your password every time you want to use the certificate for signing. You will need the password from the stache entry in your encryption and mail signing cert.
  2. Finish the wizard.

 

This wiki page demonstrates how to place a signature in Acrobat. On a mac, the first time you sign a document, it will ask for your Login password. It will be your EID password. Make sure you click Always Allow or it will make you do this for every document you try to sign. 

Update the Adobe Trusted Root Certificates To Allow For Successful Validation of UT Employee Signed Documents

When someone uses their UT assigned digital certificate to sign a document, by default new installations of Adobe Acrobat/Reader will not trust the signature, which will result in a warning being displayed when people open up the signed document and verify the authenticity of the certificate used to sign the document. This happens because the certificate company that UT uses for their certificates is not currently built into and trusted by Adobe Acrobat/Reader. So you have to manually update Acrobat to download the latest global trusted Certificate Authorities. 

  1. Ensure Adobe Acrobat/Reader is installed on the target computer.
  2. Choose Edit > Preferences (Windows) or Acrobat Acrobat Reader Menu bar > Preferences (macOS).
  3. From the Categories on the left, select Trust Manager.
  4. Select the option Load Trusted Root Certificates From An Adobe Server. This option allows Acrobat or Reader to automatically download trust settings from an Adobe server. These trust settings ensure that the user or organization associated with the certificate has met the assurance levels of the Adobe Approved Trust List (AATL) program.
  5. Tick the box to be prompted when new root certificates are available from Adobe.
  6. Select Ask Before Updating.
  7. Click Update Now.
  8. You may repeat these steps for the European Trust List.
  9. Click OK
  10. Restart Adobe Acrobat/Reader to put the change into effect.

•Now when you verify the UT employee digital certificate used to sign a document, it should show up as valid. This should happen automatically. Adobe will be able to validate signatures from any institution that uses these same Trusts.

Adding a digital certificate to sign an Adobe PDF