SignNow

SignNow is a cloud-based provider of electronic signature technology, developed in the United States. The company's Software-as-a-Service platform enables individuals and businesses to sign, and manage documents from any computer. The e-signature product is also available for free on iPhone, iPad, and Android devices, which lets you upload documents from your smartphone's e-mail, camera, or Dropbox account and tap to insert your signature.[1]

SignNow logo

The signatures within SignNow are legally recognized in the same way as traditional "wet ink" signatures as the company’s technology follows the Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act signed into law by former President Bill Clinton in 2000, as well as the EU Electronic Signatures Directive.

History

SignNow was founded in 2011 by Chris Hawkins and Andrew Ellis, and operates in Newport Beach, CA. The two saw an issue in signature and notary fraud, and set out to revolutionize use of e-signatures with a legally binding way to add signatures to electronic documents of all sorts with authenticity, non-repudiation, and data integrity.[2] It uses 256-bit SSL encryption to provide security to users.[3]

To provide a resource explaining the development of signatures, the implementation of digital signatures, and the goals of signature, Hawkins wrote and published "A History of Signatures: From Cave Paintings to Robo-Signings" in March 2011.[4] In that same month, SignNow raised $500,000 in financing from unnamed angel investors and then raised $2 million lead by Khosla Ventures in March 2012.[5]

In April 2013, Barracuda Networks acquired SignNow.[6] In October 2017 SignNow was sold to PDFfiller. It is now part of airSlate.[7]

gollark: Security issues in your browser.
gollark: How to solve all scams: communist revolution & abolish money.
gollark: Ignore his obvious scam! Please send your money to me either as cash to my carrier pigeon address, or send your email password to my email account.
gollark: So just don't run random binaries or whatever, which you should avoid anyway.
gollark: Never mind, I checked and it does exist, but apparently it's just an addition to an existing trojan which makes it meddle in discord.

See also

References

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