Arialnormal+opentype+truetype+version+701+western+verified ((top)) May 2026

The request for "arialnormal+opentype+truetype+version+701+western+verified" refers to a specific iteration of the ubiquitous

2. Digital Signature Verification (Authenticode)

Modern versions of Windows require certain system fonts to be digitally signed by Microsoft. A "verified" Arial font will contain a PKCS#7 signature in the DSIG table. This proves that the file was actually published by Microsoft Corporation and not a malware-infected trojan masquerading as a font. Given that fonts are executed in kernel mode on legacy systems, malware disguised as "Arial" is a legitimate threat (see: Duqu malware, which used malicious TrueType fonts). arialnormal+opentype+truetype+version+701+western+verified

If you are adding this specific version to a brand's style guide: Primary Typeface: Arial Normal Standardized Version: Implementation Note: This proves that the file was actually published

. If you see this exact string in a system report, it simply confirms you are using a genuine, up-to-date, and officially licensed copy of the font. Summary Table Specification OpenType-TrueType (.ttf) Release Era Modern (Windows 10/11 standard) Language Support Latin, Western European Business documents, web body text, UI design Are you trying to fix a font error or verify if a specific file you downloaded is safe to install If you see this exact string in a

Final note to the curious: Open this font in a tool like DTL OTMaster or FontForge. Look at the "DSIG" table (digital signature). That "verified" check? It's a cryptographic handshake between Microsoft and Monotype. Version 7.01 passed. That's more than you can say for most things on the internet.