In article <938431FF-0BE3-47D2-A209-EC64ECB4EDE9@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>, Paul Derby
wrote:
> You can always encrypt PowerPoint, or anything else for that matter,
using an
> X.509 certificate. Thawte offers free certificates for individuals and
many
> organizations provide their email users x.509 solutions from vendors
such as
> Entrust, Tumbleweed, Verisign, etc.
>
> After an exchange of signed emails, any attachment can be sent securely
with
> encryption, including PowerPoint.
>
> Apple's mail program and Microsoft's Outlook sup****t x.509 certificates
with
> extremely easy to use buttons the end use just has to click to sign and
> encrypt email after the x.509 certificate is installed and certificates
are
> present in the address book (Mac) or contacts (windows).
Will that prevent the recipient from editing the PPT though?
That was the original request.
================================================
Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP
PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com
PPTools: www.pptools.com
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