Under French law, an electronic signature has the same status as a handwritten signature provided that the technology utilized contains reliable means of identification and guarantees the link between the electronic signature and the act to which it is attached.
The reliability of this means shall be presumed when an electronic signature is created, when the identity of the signatory is assured and when the integrity of the act is guaranteed, under the conditions laid down by decree. This is a rebuttable presumption. The French decree 2001-272 dated March 30, 2001 defines 3 conditions of reliability:
- A secure electronic signature
- Created by a secure signature creation device and
- The signature verification is based on the use of a qualified electronic certificate.
The choice of an electronic signature solution shall therefore take into consideration both technical and legal aspects of the relevant jurisdictions.
The European Parliament and the Council adopted Regulation (EU) No. 910/2014 on electronic identification and trust services for electronic transactions in the internal market (eIDAS Regulation) on July 23, 2014. The eIDAS Regulation – which creates a directly applicable and comprehensive legal framework for both electronic identification and authentication services – is in force since July 1, 2016. It abrogates and replaces the former Electronic Signatures Directive, dated 1993, which had been the basis for the construction of the French law on electronic signatures, via a complex set of legal texts.
In terms of inputs, the regulation notably introduces a distinction between 3 types of signatures: "basic/standard," "advanced" and "qualified" signature. Clarification is, however, still expected as to the interrelation of these new types of signature with the pre-existing French definition of "e-signature."