Your digital signature is authenticated by your private key. The private key, on the other hand, is never shared. Share your public key so that others can authenticate your digital signature. The public key can be distributed to anybody who may want to use it to encrypt data and share this data specifically for the certificate's owner. The public and private keys are a pair of numbers associated with a digital certificate that together function like a very long, highly random passphrase. With certificate-based encryption, a certificate's public key is used to encrypt, and the certificate's private key is used to decrypt.With passphrase-based encryption, the same passphrase is used to encrypt and to decrypt, and anyone who has the passphrase can decrypt.
You can use strong encryption by identifying a passphrase, using digital certificates and a recipient list, or both. Strong encryption is far more secure than the older, traditional ZIP encryption. You can encrypt files using either strong encryption or traditional ZIP encryption. When a file is encrypted, you must have an appropriate credential (either a passphrase or digital certificate) to open it.
SecureZIP for Mac from PKWARE, Inc., lets you create ZIP archives and open them, even if they are encrypted or digitally signed. Getting started with SecureZIP for Mac OS