The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) has released the new standard, which defines a general-purpose Extended Key Usage (EKU) dedicated to electronic signatures and document signing. An EKU is a means for a Certificate Authority (CA) to declare the intended use of a digital certificate.
The new EKU is part of a movement in public trust PKI to separate CAs by the types of digital certificates they create. The trend began in the work of the CA/Browser (CA/B) Forum, whose standards for TLS/SSL and code signing certificates dictate the separation of those use cases by CA. More recently, browser root programs have begun requesting that CAs replace their existing Root CA certificates with new versions that are separated by use case.
This housekeeping is widely supported from a compliance and standards perspective. However, it quickly became apparent that the list of EKU originally defined by the IETF required expanding.  RFC 5280 defines a range of general-purpose EKU, such as id-kp-serverAuth or id-kp-clientAuth for TLS and id-kp-codeSigning for code signing, but has nothing for document signing.
As a result, the majority of signing certificates today use the id-kp-emailProtection EKU, which is intended for S/MIME certificates. Alternatively, some CAs use proprietary EKU provided by individual signing platforms.
Ongoing standards efforts which regulate CA behavior in issuing certificates used for secure email and e-signatures make it beneficial to separate these certificate types by EKU. Examples include the , and the EU’s ongoing development of the and Qualified certificates.
Now each of those certificate types will have a clear EKU home of their own, allowing standards development to continue with lower risk of unintended adverse effects for multipurpose certificates that previously overlapped the use cases.
The new RFC 9336 was authored by Tadahiko ITO of SECOM, Tomofumi Okubo of ¶ºÒõ¹Ý and Sean Turner of sn3rd.  The id-kp-documentSigning EKU has been allocated Object Identifier (OID) of 1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.36 by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), making the EKU available to be used in certificates.
Going forward document signing standards, root programs and e-signature products will then be able to use the EKU to determine whether a particular certificate is intended for use for document signing or not.
¶ºÒõ¹Ý believes the adoption of a documentSigning EKU is in line with industry trends for separation of certificate uses and will benefit the continuing development of industry standards for document signing and S/MIME.
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