New Release: Email Security Awareness Training- Empower your team to proactively combat email threats with easy-to-launch phishing simulations and assessments Learn More
New Release: Email Security Awareness Training- Empower your team to proactively combat email threats with easy-to-launch phishing simulations and assessments

New Patent Covers Robust Verification & Search Utilities for Postmarked Email

LAS VEGAS, Nevada, February 13, 2013 – Trustifi Corporation Patent Application #12/486,721 was issued by the USPTO on February 12, 2012 as Patent #8,374,930 assigned to Trustifi Corporation. In a further development, a third Patent Application #12/553,105 was issued a notice of allowance on January 17, 2012. Trustifi Postmarked Email® is a service that digitally signs email with an electronic time stamp securely synchronized with the atomic clock at the National Institute of Science and Technology (NIST), an agency of the United States Department of Commerce. Trustifi provides legal proof of sending, by means of a time-stamped record that an email, containing specific content and attachments, was transmitted to specific email addresses at a specific date and time. “Our verification service has the ability to provide non-repudiation for postmarked emails, thereby safeguarding the integrity and origin of the data in electronic documents,” said Peter Benisti, President & Chief Executive Officer of Trustifi. “Comprehensive search is also a very important utility for digitally archived bills, EOBs, statements and notices.” These patents provide coverage for the main features of the Trustifi Postmarked Email system. “We are very pleased to have additional patents granted by the USPTO, as it confirms the novelty of Trustifi’s intellectual property,” said Victor M.G. Chaltiel, Chairman of the Board of Trustifi. “The newly allowed Patent Application #12/553,105 covers robust verification and search utilities,” said Philip A. Kantor – Executive Vice President and General Counsel of Trustifi. “For example, it enables a user, who lacks complete records regarding a previously sent postmarked email, to use whatever he has (e.g., an addressee, a date, a portion of text, an attachment) to find the email and verify everything about it.” Tags: Cyber Crime, Data Breach, Email Encryption, Email Privacy, Email Security, Encryption, News

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