S/MIME (for Secure MIME, or Secure
Multipurpose Mail Extension) is a security process used for e-mail
exchanges that makes it possible to guarantee the confidentiality and
non-repudiation of electronic messages.
S/MIME is based on the MIME standard, the goal of
which is to let users attach files other than ASCII text files to electronic
messages. The MIME standard therefore makes it possible to attach all types of files to e-mails.
S/MIME was originally developed by the company RSA Data Security. Ratified in
July 1999 by the IETF, S/MIME has become a standard, whose specifications are
contained in RFCs 2630 to 2633.
The S/MIME standard is based on the principle of
public-key encryption. S/MIME therefore makes it possible to encrypt the
content of messages but does not encrypt the communication.
The various sections of an electronic message,
encoded according to the MIME standard, are each
encrypted using a session key.
The session key is inserted in each section's
header, and is encrypted using the recipient's public key. Only the recipient
can open the message's body, using his private key, which guarantees the
confidentiality and integrity of the received message.
In addition, the message's signature is encrypted
with the sender's private key. Anyone intercepting the communication can read
the content of the message's signature, but this ensures the recipient of the
sender's identity, since only the sender is capable of encrypting a message
(with his private key) that can be decrypted with his public key.
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