A time stamping protocol has two stages referred to as the ticketing stage
and the certification stage. During the ticketing stage, the document or
other identifying data is sent to the TSA. The TSA generates a "ticket"
based on the document or other identifying data and a time indication
derived from a trusted clock. The ticket, which serves as an unsigned
time stamp receipt, is transmitted back to the document originator.
During the certification stage, the holder of the ticket requests a
certified time stamp receipt by presenting the ticket to the TSA. The TSA
verifies the ticket and generates a signed time stamp receipt, called the
ticket stub, which is then transmitted back to the document originator.
The ticket stub serves as a "universal time-stamp" that the holder of the
ticket stub can use to prove the date of the document.