(Image credit: Adobe) After years of waiting and frustration, a free PDF editor is finally coming to Google Chrome thanks to Adobe. This has been working for me while the IT team tris to figure out how to prevent the scanninf tool from "modifying" the attachment files. New Chrome PDF extension is available now. ![]() This means it doesn’t work on Chromebooks or Chrome OS. It also provides resources on using digital signatures, including a downloadable guide on creating a digital or electronic signature. This way they scanning tool can't access the file and won't change it, so the signature will remain intact. Adobe Acrobat Adobe provides their Acrobat extension on the Chrome Web Store, but sadly it’s limited to ONLY Windows users. Due to the hash change (probably triggered by a change in the file) the file naturally loses its signature (my guess is that the scanning tool is somehow "marking" the file safe or unsafe, but I can't say for sure).īut there is a workaround that worked for me: when sending digital signed files put them inside a ZIP (or RAR or any other format) file with password. ![]() I calculated their hash codes before being sent and after being sent and the hash code changed everytime. Turns out it was a problem with my company scanning tool: After scanned the attached files in a e-mail would lose their digital signatures.Īfter a few tests I found out why: the files were being "changed". Go to the Google Chrome web store and find the Acrobat extension.
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