PRICES include / exclude VAT
Homepage>BS Standards>03 SOCIOLOGY. SERVICES. COMPANY ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT. ADMINISTRATION. TRANSPORT>03.240 Postal services>DD CEN/TS 15121-2:2011 Postal services. Hybrid mail Secured electronic postal services (SePS) interface specification. ECPM service
Sponsored link
immediate downloadReleased: 2011-01-31
DD CEN/TS 15121-2:2011 Postal services. Hybrid mail Secured electronic postal services (SePS) interface specification. ECPM service

DD CEN/TS 15121-2:2011

Postal services. Hybrid mail Secured electronic postal services (SePS) interface specification. ECPM service

Format
Availability
Price and currency
English Secure PDF
Immediate download
191.18 EUR
You can read the standard for 1 hour. More information in the category: E-reading
Reading the standard
for 1 hour
19.12 EUR
You can read the standard for 24 hours. More information in the category: E-reading
Reading the standard
for 24 hours
57.35 EUR
English Hardcopy
In stock
191.18 EUR
Standard number:DD CEN/TS 15121-2:2011
Pages:16
Released:2011-01-31
ISBN:978 0 580 70586 1
Status:Standard
DESCRIPTION

DD CEN/TS 15121-2:2011


This standard DD CEN/TS 15121-2:2011 Postal services. Hybrid mail is classified in these ICS categories:
  • 03.240 Postal services

This document specifies a secured electronic postal service, referred to as the Electronic Postal Certification Mark (EPCM) service, which provides a chain of evidence, stored by an administration as a trusted third party, to prove the existence of an electronic event, for a certain content, at a certain date and time, and involving one or more identified parties.

The service is defined by reference to the concepts, schemas and operations defined in CEN/TS 15121-1, Postal Services — Hybrid Mail — Part 1: Secured electronic postal services (SePS) interface specification — Concepts, schemas and operations. It requires support for five core SePS operations and permits optional support seven others.

This version of the specification does not cover:

  • a description of the issues surrounding inter-operability between multiple postal SePS implementations when a business transaction Lifecycle requires the participation of more than one SePS implementation in a cross-border scenario involving two or more postal services;

  • issues surrounding SePS usage in a ‘multiple Certificate Authority’ scenario where inter-operating posts are participating in a cross-border transaction as described above;

  • examination of “Certificate Authority deployment model” alternatives necessitated by the cross-border scenarios described above.