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Information Brokerage and Management The information brokerage and management layer provide service integration through t...

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Secure Messaging and Structured Document Interchange Services The importance of the fourth layer, secure messaging, is cl...

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techniques are important issues that need to be resolved for ensuring the legality of the message-based transactions thems...

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Transaction Security and Management Support for transaction processing (TP) is fundamental to success in the electronic c...

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authorized) can read and download it. Publishing information requires a server program and reading data requires a client ...

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Chapter 4 Technology behind the Web Information providers (or publishers) run programs (called servers) from which the b...

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These are URLs for internet news articles and news groups (the NNTP protocol) and for HTTP archives, for TELNET destinatio...

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Chapter 5 Network Security and Firewalls The ability to conduct business on a public network has strong attraction-and t...

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Encrypted Documents and Electronic Mail E-mail users who desire confidentiality and sender authentication are using encry...

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Chapter 6 Electronic Commerce Companies

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Chapter 7 Pictorial Representation: E-Buying Methodology Buying Procedure on on-line shopping website, Flipkart. Step 1...

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Step 2 - Select the desired product category you want to buy. Step 3 - Choose the product you want to buy.

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Step 4 - On the product’s page, click on Add to WISHLIST to add more products to your recent shopping. Step 5 – Either L...

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Step 6 - To buy, click on BUY NOW button on the product’s page. Then click on PLACE ORDER button to place your order. St...

Step 8 - You are required to fill up all the details asked in the form, then click on SAVE AND CONITNUE. Step 9 - Click...

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Step 10 - Select the desired PAYMENT METHOD, according to your facility. Step 11 - Fill up the details and click on PAY...

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Buying Procedure on on-line shopping website, Yepme. Step 1 - Step 2 -

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Step 3 - Step 4 -

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Step 5 - Step 6 -

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Step 7 - Step 8 -

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Step 9 -

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Chapter 8 Conclusion E-Commerce is growing tremendously. A lot of companies have joined between the period July and Augu...

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BIBLIOGRAPHY Frontiers of Electronic Commerce by Ravi Kalakota and Andrew B. Whinston Big E-Commerce deals stir up s...

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E commerce project
1. 1. ELECTRONIC COMMERCE Rahul Mathur, BCA-III Year Bachelor of Computer Applications Dezyne E’cole College, Ajmer www.dezyneecole.com Information Technology -------
------------------ Submitted By
2. 2. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT I Am Thankful To Dezyne E’cole College To Help In Making This Project On E- Commerce. A Special Thanks To Ms. Jyoti Phulwani to Guide Us Step By
Step in the Making of This Project Report. Thanking You Rahul Mathur Bachelor of Computer Applications III Year
3. 3. CONTENTS 1. Chapter 1 Introduction 2. Chapter 2 Electronic Commerce and the World Wide Web 3. Chapter 3 Architectural Framework for Electronic Commerce 4. Chapter
4 Technology Behind the Web 5. Chapter 5 Network Security and Firewalls 6. Chapter 6 Electronic Commerce Companies 7. Chapter 7 Pictorial Representation: E-Buying
Methodology 8. Chapter 8 Conclusion
4. 4. Chapter 1 Introduction Every individual of company that wants to make money and become the next Microsoft needs to understand the market potential, business implication and
technological foundations of electronic commerce. But what is electronic commerce everybody is talking about. How does it affect the organisation way of doing business? What sort of
technical and business skills are needed to be successful? Companies and consumers are discovering that global networking and other technological innovations are powerful assets if
used as competitive weapons in their day to day activities. E-Commerce is associated with the buying and selling of information, products and services via computer network today.
Consumer desires are very hard to predict pin point or decipher in electronic markets whose shape, structure and population are still in early stages. Needs envisioned include
entertainment on demand including 500 channel T.V., video on demand, games on demand, electronic retailing via catalogues and Kiosks and home shopping networks. In future,
viewers will decide what they want to see and when they want to participate and successful market places are expected to those that cater to consumer’s loneliness, boredom, education
and career. In highly competitive society, where neighbours seldom talk to one another, these outlets give consumer someone to talk after going home. Let’s take a look at the changing
conditions in the “new economy” with respect to the retail industry. Consumers are pushing retailers to the wall demanding lower prices, better quality, and a large section of in-season
goods. Retailers are scrambling to fill the order. They are slashing back-office cost reducing profit-margins, reducing cycle times, buying more wisely and making huge investment in
technology. They are revamping distribution channels to make sure that warehouses costs are down by reducing their average inventory levels and coordinating the consumer demand
and supply pattern. In the push to reduce prices more and more retailers are turning to overseas suppliers in part because of cheaper labour costs. Retail are the immediate line of fire and
had to do the cost cutting. They put the pressure on the manufacturer and then to the supplier end of the pipeline. Electronic commerce is forcing companies to rethink the existing ways
of doing target marketing; relationship marketing and even event marketing. Adaptation would include moving towards computerised “paperless” operations to, reduce trading costs and
facilitate the adoption of new business process. Japanese approach JIT (Just in Time) system, total quality control and quality circles are focused now for delivery of goods through
electronic commerce.
5. 5. Chapter 2 Electronic Commerce and the World-Wide-Web We have broadly defined electronic commerce as a modern business methodology that addresses the desire of the firm,
consumer and management to cut cost while improving the quality of goods and increasing the speed of services. The need for electronic commerce stems from the demand within
business and government to make better use of computing, that is, better apply computer technology to improve business process and information exchange both within an enterprise and
across organisations. In short, electronic commerce appears to be an integrating force that represents the digital conversions of twenty-first century business applications and computing
technologies. Electronic commerce applications emphasize the generation and exploitation of new business opportunity and to use the popular buzzword, “generate business value”. For
instance, when buyer-seller transactions occur in the electronic marketplace, information is accessed, absorbed, arranged and sold in different ways. In fact, the information a product or
service is separated from the physical product or service and has become important on its own. In some cases, the information can become as crucial as the actual product or service in
terms of its effect on a company’s profits. In short, information based business transactions are creating new ways of doing business and even new types of business. Electronic
commerce application are quite varied. In its most common form, E- Commerce is also used to donate the paperless exchange of business information using EDI, Electronic Mail (E-
Mail), Electronic Bulletin Boards, Electronic Fund Transfer (EFT) and other similar technologies. These technologies are normally applied in high-payoff areas, recognizing that paper-
handling activities usually increase expense without adding value. On the other hand, the term electronic commerce is used to describe a new on-line approach to perform traditional
functions such as payment and funds transfer, order entry and processing, invoicing, inventory management, cargo tracking, electronic catalogue and point-of-sale, data gathering. More
recently, companies have realised that the advertising, marketing and customer support functions are also part of electronic commerce application domain. These business functions acts
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as initiators to the entire order management cycle that incorporates the more established notions of electronic commerce. In short, what we are witnessing is the use of the term electronic
commerce as an umbrella concept to integrate a wide range of new and old applications.
6. 6. Despite the changes taking place, businesses have three goals: stay competitive, improve productivity and deliver quality service. These goals are the guiding boys for firms plotting
their course in the turbulent waters of electronic commerce. There are other factors that companies need to keep in mind. First, most companies have already made enormous information
technology investments to automate their key internal processes such as purchasing, invoicing and other similar functions. So, some aspects of the technological infrastructure for
electronic commerce are already in place. The challenge now become: How to effectively leverage this investment. Second, prices for computer hardware and network equipment
continue to fall, marking information technology an appealing investment for many businesses, especially when it’s used for high-impact applications such as linking their distributed
operations. However, investment without a clear idea of the electronic commerce architecture being built would be akin to driving with blinders on. As a result, companies that have
decided that electronic commerce applications represent one of the best strategic investment they can make must first exert some effort to understand the technology underlying
electronic commerce applications. At first glance, it appears that messaging based technologies such as EDI and Male- Enabled applications, combined with database and information
management service, form the technical foundation for effective electronic commerce solutions. No single one of these technologies can deliver the full potential of electronic commerce,
however. What we require is an integrated architecture the likes of which has never been seen before. This integrated architecture is emerging in the form of the World Wide Web
(WWW). As electronic commerce becomes more mature, we are beginning to see sophisticated applications being developed on WWW. Technically and commercially, the WWW client-
server model seems poised to become a dominant technology. Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) Information Sharing Collaborative Work Corporate
Digital Library Electronic Commerce Marketing, Advertising Sales, Customer Support Electronic Publishing E-mail Fax Electronic Messaging Electronic Document Interchange
7. 7. Chapter 3 Architectural framework for Electronic Commerce The software framework necessary for building electronic commerce applications is little understood in existing
literature. In general a framework is intended to define and create tools that integrate the information found in today’s closed systems and allow the development of e-commerce
applications. It is important to understand that the aim of the architectural framework itself is not to build new database management systems, data repository, computer languages,
software agent-based transaction monitors or communication protocols. Rather, the architecture should focus on synthesizing the diverse resources already in place in corporations to
facilitate the integration of data and software for better applications. We propound that the electronic commerce application architecture consist of six layers of functionality or services:
1) Application 2) Brokerage services, data or transaction management 3) Interface and support layers 4) Secure messaging and electronic document interchange 5) Middleware and
structured document interchange 6) Network infrastructure and basic communication services Applications Services Customer-to-Business Business-to-Business Intra-organisational
Brokerage and data management Order processing-mail order houses Payment scheme-electronic cash Clearinghouse or virtual mall Interface layer Interactive catalogue Directory
support function Software agents Secure messaging Secure Hypertext Transfer Protocol Encrypted e-mail, EDI Remote programming (RPC) Middleware services Structure documents
(SGML, HTML) Compound document (OLE, OpenDoc) Network infrastructure Wireless-cellular, radio, PCS Wire line-POTS, Coaxial, Fibre Optics
8. 8. These layers cooperate to provide a seamless transition between today’s computing resources and those of tomorrow by transparently integrating information access and exchange
within the context of the chosen application. As seen in above figure, electronic commerce applications are based on several elegant technologies. But only when they are integrated do
they provide uniquely powerful solutions. In the ensuing discussion of each of these layers, we will not elaborate on the various aspects of the network infrastructure that transports
information. Electronic Commerce Application Services The application services layer of e-commerce will be comprised of existing and future applications built on innate architecture.
Three distinct classes of electronic applications can be distinguished: Customer-to-Business, Business-to-Business and Intra-organisation. Accounting, Finance and Management
Manufacturing and Production Engineering and Research Procurement, Distribution and Logistics Advertising Sales Customer Service Global Suppliers Classic EDI Customers
Customer Oriented Electronic Commerce Private Commerce Internal Publishing
9. 9. o Customer-to-Business Transaction We call this category market place transaction. In a market place transaction, customers learn about products differently through electronic
publishing, buy them differently using electronic cash and secure payment systems, and have them delivered differently. Also, how customers allocate their loyalty may also be different.
In light of this, organisation itself has to adapt to a world where the traditional concepts of brand differentiation no longer hold-where “Quality” has a new meaning, where “Content”
may not be equated to “Product”, where “Distribution” may not automatically mean “Physical Transport”. In this new environment, brand equity can rapidly evaporate forcing firms to
develop new ways of doing business. o Business-to-Business Transaction We call this category market-link transactions. Here, businesses, government and other organisations depend on
computer-to-computer communication as a fast, an economical and a dependable way to conduct business transactions. Small companies are also beginning to see the benefits of
adopting the same methods. Business-to-business transactions include the use of EDI and Electronic mail for purchasing goods and services, buying information and consulting services,
submitting request for proposals and receive proposals. For example, the current accounts payable process occurs through the exchange of paper documents. Each year the trading
partners exchange millions of invoices, checks purchase orders, financial reports and other transactions. Most of the documents are in electronic form at their point of origin but are
printed and key- entered at the point of receipt. The current manual process of printing, mailing and rekeying is costly, time consuming and error-prone. Given this situation and faced
with the need to reduce costs, small businesses are looking towards electronic commerce as possible saviour. o Intra-organisational transaction We call this category, market-driven
transactions. A company becomes market driven by dispersing throughout the firm information about its customers and competitors; by spreading strategic and tactical decision making
so that all units can participate; and by continuously monitoring their customer commitment by making improve customer satisfaction an ongoing objective. To maintain the relationships
that are critical to delivering superior customer value, management must play close attention to service, both before and after sales.
10. 10. Information Brokerage and Management The information brokerage and management layer provide service integration through the notion of information brokerages, the
development of which is necessitated by the increasing information resource fragmentation. We use the notion of information brokerage to represent an intermediary who provides
service integration between customers and information providers, given some constraint such as a low price, fast service or profit maximisation for a client. Information brokers, for
example are rapidly becoming necessary in dealing with the voluminous amounts of information on the networks. As online database migrate to consumer information utilities,
consumers and information professionals will have to keep up the knowledge and ownership of all these systems. Who’s got what? How do you use it? What do they charge? Most
professionals have enough trouble keeping track of files of interest on one or two database services. With all the complexity associated with large number of online database and service
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bureaus, it’s impossible to expect humans to do the searching. It will have to be software programs-information brokers or software agents, to use the most popular term-Act on
searcher’s behalf. Information brokerage does more than just searching. Interface and Support Services The third layer, interface and support services, will provide interfaces for
electronic commerce applications such as interactive catalogues and will support directory services-functions necessary for information search and access. These two concepts are very
different. Interactive catalogues are the customized interface to consumer applications such as home shopping. An interactive catalogue is an extension of the paper-based catalogue and
incorporates additional features such as sophisticated graphics and video to make the advertising more attractive. Directories, on the other hand, operate behind the scenes and attempt to
organise the enormous amount of information and transactions generated to facilitate electronic commerce. Directory services database make data from any server appear as a local file.
A classic example of a directory is the telephone White Pages, which allows us to locate people and telephone numbers. In the case of electronic commerce, directories would play an
important role in information management functions. For instance, take the case of buying an airline ticket with several stopovers with a caveat that the time between layovers be
minimized. This search would require several queries to various online directories to find empty seats on various airlines and then the availability of seats would be coordinated with the
amount of time spent in the airport terminals.
11. 11. Secure Messaging and Structured Document Interchange Services The importance of the fourth layer, secure messaging, is clear. Everyone in business knows that electronic
messaging is a critical business issue. Consider a familiar business scenario; you hand over an urgent fax on Monday and find out on Tuesday that it’s still sitting on your fax operator’s
desk. What happened? The line was busy and he thought he would try again later. Or, the number was wrong, but he forgot to let you know. Or you are in London and you need to send a
spreadsheet that details a marketing plan for a product introduction strategy to co-worker in New York. This must be done today, not tomorrow when the courier service would deliver.
There is a solution to these common and frustrating problems. It’s called integrated messaging: a group of computer services that through the use of a network send, receive and combine
messages, faxes and large data file. Some better known examples are electronic mail, enhance fax and electronic data interchange. Broadly defined, messaging is the software that sits
between the network infrastructure and the clients or electronic commerce applications, masking the peculiarities of the environment. Others define messaging as a framework for the
total implementation of portable applications, divorcing you from the architectural primitives of your system. In general, messaging products are not applications that solve problems;
they are more enablers of the application that solve problems. Messaging services offer solution for communicating non-formatted (unstructured) data such as purchase orders, shipping
notices and invoices. Unstructured messaging consist of fax, e-mail and form based system like Lotus Notes. Structured documents messaging consist of the automated interchange of
standardized and approved messages between computer applications via telecommunication lines. Examples of structured document messaging include EDI. Messaging is gaining
momentum in electronic commerce and seems to have many advantages. It supports both synchronous (immediate) and asynchronous (delayed) message delivery and processing. With
asynchronous, when a message is sent, work continues (software doesn’t wait for a response). This allows the transfer of messages through store-and-forward methods. The main
disadvantages of messaging are the new types of applications it enables- which appear to be more complex, especially to traditional programmers-and the jungle of standards it involves.
Because of the lack of standards, there is often no interoperability between messaging vendors leading to islands of messaging. Also, security, privacy and confidentiality through data
encryption and authentication
12. 12. techniques are important issues that need to be resolved for ensuring the legality of the message-based transactions themselves. Middleware Services Middleware is a relatively new
concept that emerged only recently like so many other innovations, it came into being out of necessity. Users in the 1970s, when vendors delivered homogenous systems that worked,
didn’t have a need for middleware. When conditions changed-along with the hardware and the software the organisations couldn’t cope: The tools were inadequate, the backlog was
enormous, and the pressure was overwhelming. And, the users were dissatisfied. Something was needed to solve all the interface, translation, transformation and interpretation problems
that were driving application developers crazy. With the growth of networks, client-server technology, and all other forms of communicating between/among unlike platforms, the
problems of getting all the pieces to work together grew from formidable to horrendous. As the cry for distributed computing spread, users demanded interaction between dissimilar
systems, networks that permitted shared resources, and applications that could be accessed by multiple software programs. In simple terms middleware is the ultimate mediator between
diverse software programs that enables them talk to one another. Transparency Transparency implies that users should be unaware that they are accessing multiple systems. Transparency
is essential for dealing with higher-level issues than physical media and interconnection that the underlying network infrastructure is in charge of. The ideal picture is one of a “Virtual”
network: a collection of work-group, departmental, enterprise and enterprise LANs that appears to the end user or client application to be a seamless and easily accessed whole.
Transparency is accomplished using middleware that facilitates a distributed computing environment. This gives users and applications transparent access to data, computation, and other
resources across collections of multivendor, heterogeneous systems. The strategic architectures of every major system vendor are now based on some form of middleware. The key to
realising the theoretical benefit of such an architecture is transparency. Users need not spend their time trying to understand where something is. Nor should application developers have
to code into their applications the exact locations of resources over the network. The goal is for the applications to send a request to the middleware layer, which then satisfies the request
anyway it can, using remote information.
13. 13. Transaction Security and Management Support for transaction processing (TP) is fundamental to success in the electronic commerce market. Security and management are essential
to all layers in the electronic commerce model. Transaction integrity must be given for businesses that cannot afford any loss or inconsistency in data. For electronic commerce,
middleware provides the qualities expected in the standard TP System: the so- called ACID properties (Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation and Durability). World Wide Web (WWW) As
the Architecture Electronic commerce depends on the unspoken assumption that computers cooperate efficiently for seamless information sharing. Unfortunately, this assumption of
interoperability has been supported by the realities of practical computing. Computing is still a world made up of many technical directions, product implementations and competing
vendors. This diversity, while good for innovation causes problem as the e-commerce applications try to impose a certain discipline on the proliferating computers and networks. It is
ironic that real effect of computing is all too often then prevention of data sharing due to incompatibilities-architectures, data formats and communication protocols. What does the Web
Encompass? The web has become an umbrella for wide range of concepts and technologies that differ markedly in purpose and scope. These include the global hypertext publishing
concept, the universal reader concept and the client-server concept. The global hypertext publishing concept promotes the idea of a seamless information world in which all on-line
information can be accessed and retrieved in a consistent and simple way. To access information in this seamless world, we will need the ability to address many types of data-text files,
images, sound files and animation sequences. The universal readership concept promotes the idea that, unlike the segmented applications of the past, we can use one application-a
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universal (or common) user interface-to read a variety of documents. This concept implies that once information is published it is accessible from any type of computer, in any country
and that any (authorised) person merely needs to use one simple program to access it. This is accomplished in the web by using a core browser or application that is augmented by
supporting applications. The core browser implements only minimal functionality and attempts to offload more specialised work onto the supporting applications. The client server
concept allows the web to grow easily without any centralised control. Anyone can publish information and anyone (as long as he or she is
14. 14. authorized) can read and download it. Publishing information requires a server program and reading data requires a client browser. All the clients and all the servers are connected to
one another by the Internet. The various standard protocols allows all clients to communicate with all servers. In practice the web hangs on a number of essential concepts, including the
following: The addressing scheme known as uniform resource locator (URL) makes the hyper media world possible despite many different protocols. A network protocol known as
hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP) used by client browsers and servers offers performance and features not otherwise available. A mark-up language (HTML), which every web client
is required to understand, is used for the representation of hypertext documents containing text, list boxes and graphics information across the net.
15. 15. Chapter 4 Technology behind the Web Information providers (or publishers) run programs (called servers) from which the browsers (clients) can obtain information. These programs
can either be Web servers that understand the hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP), “Gateway” programs that convert an existing information format to hypertext, or a non-HTTP server
that Web browser can access-anonymous FTP or Gopher servers. Web servers are composed of two major parts: the hypertext transfer protocol for transmitting documents between
servers and clients and the hypertext mark-up language (HTML) format for documents. The link between HTML files and the HTTP servers is provided by the uniform resource locators
(URLs). Uniform Resource Locator (URL) The documents that the browsers display are hypertext that contains pointers to other documents. The browser let you deal with the pointers
in a transparent way-select the pointer and you are presented with the text to which it points. This pointer is implemented using a concept that is central to Web browsers: Uniform
Resource Locators (URLs). One way to think about URLs is to use the libraries and location on a shelf as a metaphor. A URL for a digital library wold be a unique call number that
provides the exact location of every book in the world, including the country, city, street and library shelf location. In practice, URLs are the string used as addresses of objects
(documents, images) on the web. Think of them as analogous to your e-mail address. Just as your address is unique and may be used by any other Internet user to send you mail without
knowing exactly where you are, a URL marks the unique location on the Internet where a file or service can be found. URLs follow a fairly consistent pattern. The first part describes the
type of resource; the second part gives the name of the server housing the resource; and the third part gives full filename of the resource. URLs are universal in that they provide access
to a wide range of network services which required separate applications in the past. For a new network protocol one can easily form an address as the set of parameters necessary to
retrieve the object. If these parameters are encoded into a concise string, with a prefix to identify the protocols and encoding, one has a new URL scheme. Take a look at the URL format
below: FTP : ftp://server.address/complete.file.name Gopher : gopher://server.address:port/directory/filename TELNET : telnet://server.address:port HTTP :
http://server.address:port/homepage.html New : news:misc.stocks.invest
16. 16. These are URLs for internet news articles and news groups (the NNTP protocol) and for HTTP archives, for TELNET destinations, e-mail addresses and so on. The same can be done
for names of objects in a given name space. For example, the URL of the main page for the web project happens to be: http://web.w3.org/hypertext/web/TheProject.html The prefix
“http” in the preceding example indicates the address space and defines the interpretation of the rest of the string. The HTTP protocol is to be used, so the string contains the address of
the server to be contacted and a substring to be passed to the server. As noted earlier, different protocols use different syntaxes, but they do have a small amount in common. For
example, the common URL syntax reserves the solidus (/) as a way of representing a hierarchical space, the pound label (#) as a way of pointing inside the document and question mark
(?) as a separator between the address of an object and a query operation applied to it. Hierarchical spaces are useful for hypertext, where one “work” may be split up into many
interlinked documents. The # allows relative names to exploit the hierarchical structure and allows links to be made within the work independent of the higher parts of the URL, such as
the server name. URLs are central to the web architecture. The fact that it is easy to address an object anywhere on the internet is essential for the system to scale and for the information
space to be independent of the network and server topology.
17. 17. Chapter 5 Network Security and Firewalls The ability to conduct business on a public network has strong attraction-and the potential for big savings. Security and confidentiality are
essential, however, before businesses can conduct financial transactions over the internet and a lack of widespread security measures remains at this time. At present, credit card
numbers, financial records and other important information are not encrypted and can be intercepted by any savvy Internet hacker. The discussion of security concern in electronic
commerce can be divided into two broad types: 1. Client-Server Security uses various authorization methods to make sure that only valid users and programs have access to information
resources such as databases. Access control mechanisms must be set up to ensure that properly authenticated users are allowed access only to those resources that they are entitled to use.
Such mechanisms include password protection, encrypted smart cards, biometrics and firewalls. 2. Data and transaction security ensures the privacy and confidentiality in electronic
messages and data packets, including the authentication of remote users in network transactions for activities such as on-line payment. The goal is to defeat any attempt to assume
another identity while involved with electronic mail or other forms of data communication. Preventive measures include data encryption using various cryptographic methods. Data and
Message Security The lack of data and message security on the Internet has become a profile problem due to increasing number of merchants trying to spur commerce on the global
network. For instance, credit card numbers in their plain text form create a risk when transmitted across the Internet where the possibility of the number falling into the wrong hands is
relatively high. Would you be willing to type in your credit card number knowing the risk? Even worse, would you expose your customers to that risk? Just the thought of “sniffer”
programs that collect credit card numbers en masse is enough to keep merchants away from on-line shopping given the possible lawsuits and other liability issues. In short, the lack of
business transaction security is widely acknowledged as a major impediment to widespread e-commerce.
18. 18. Encrypted Documents and Electronic Mail E-mail users who desire confidentiality and sender authentication are using encryption. Encryption is simply intended to keep personal
thoughts personal. Some users are already using Pretty Good Privacy (PGP); others are starting to use Privacy Enhanced Mail (PEM). E-mail is typically encrypted for the reason that all
network correspondence is open for eavesdropping. Internet e-mail is obviously far less secure then the postal system, where envelopes protect correspondence from casual snooping. A
glance at the header area of any e-mail message, by contrast, will show that it has passed through a number of nodes on its way to you. Every one of these nodes present the opportunity
for snooping.
19. 19. Chapter 6 Electronic Commerce Companies
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20. 20. Chapter 7 Pictorial Representation: E-Buying Methodology Buying Procedure on on-line shopping website, Flipkart. Step 1 - Go to the link of the website, www.flipkart.com
21. 21. Step 2 - Select the desired product category you want to buy. Step 3 - Choose the product you want to buy.
22. 22. Step 4 - On the product’s page, click on Add to WISHLIST to add more products to your recent shopping. Step 5 – Either Log-In or Sign-Up to add more products to you Wish List.
23. 23. Step 6 - To buy, click on BUY NOW button on the product’s page. Then click on PLACE ORDER button to place your order. Step 7 -Now, it will ask, whether you are existing
customer or a new customer. Choose desired option and then click on CONTINUE.
24. 24. Step 8 - You are required to fill up all the details asked in the form, then click on SAVE AND CONITNUE. Step 9 - Click on CONTINUE button by confirming your purchase.
25. 25. Step 10 - Select the desired PAYMENT METHOD, according to your facility. Step 11 - Fill up the details and click on PAY.
26. 26. Buying Procedure on on-line shopping website, Yepme. Step 1 - Step 2 -
27. 27. Step 3 - Step 4 -
28. 28. Step 5 - Step 6 -
29. 29. Step 7 - Step 8 -
30. 30. Step 9 -
31. 31. Chapter 8 Conclusion E-Commerce is growing tremendously. A lot of companies have joined between the period July and August. Online retail is still a tiny spot in India’s retail
market of about $500 billion a year, but it is growing at a quick pace. A study by retail consultancy Technopark predicts India’s e-tailing market will reach $32 billion by 2020 from $2.3
billion in 2014. Ethnic Indian clothes and casual work are favourite products but unusual products like pets- too are being offered online. With the huge growth that e-commerce has
witnessed in recent times analysed like Devyanshu Dutta, says there is scope for more players to come in. but some also warn about the risks the space is fraught with, as only a few
chances of making it big. They also see consolidation in the sector going forward.
32. 32. BIBLIOGRAPHY Frontiers of Electronic Commerce by Ravi Kalakota and Andrew B. Whinston Big E-Commerce deals stir up sector-Economic Times www.Flipkart.com
www.Yepme.com

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