With DocHub, you can quickly bind signature in WRI from any place. Enjoy capabilities like drag and drop fields, editable text, images, and comments. You can collect electronic signatures safely, include an extra level of protection with an Encrypted Folder, and work together with teammates in real-time through your DocHub account. Make changes to your WRI files online without downloading, scanning, printing or mailing anything.
You can find your edited record in the Documents folder of your account. Create, share, print out, or convert your document into a reusable template. Considering the variety of powerful tools, it’s easy to enjoy trouble-free document editing and managing with DocHub.
With so many facets of modern life being automated, signatures being easy to forge, and given how difficult it is to prove based on signature alone whether a given person actually signed something, using a persons exact signature design for verification purposes after the fact is rapidly going the way of the Dodo. This leads us to the question of the day- given all this, is there any rule about what exactly your signature has to look like? Can you, for example, just sign all your legal documents with a big X like they do in cartoons? As it turns out, just like its possible to cash those big novelty checks because theres no rule about what a check has to look like or be made of (just what information needs to be included), you can, in many regions of the world, sign a document in any way you wish. This is because a signature from a legal standpoint is just proof that you considered and accepted something. Or to quote the U.S. Uniform Commercial Code 3-401(b): A signature may be m