1. Question 1
A. Go to a popular online e-commerce site like Amazon.com. Place several items in your shopping cart, and then go to check out. When you reach the screen that asks for your credit card number, right-click on the Web browser and select “Properties.” What can you find out about the cryptosystems and protocols in use to protect this transaction?
B. Repeat Exercise 1 on a different Web site (use Ebay). Does this site use the same or different proto-cols? Describe them.
1. Question 1 A. Go to a popular online e-commerce site like Amazon.com. Place several items...
When I want to create a website or application for e-commerce, the site for printing books or printing on clothes with the sale of printing tools. What is the appropriate software and hardware? Choosing Software The development of e-commerce required a great deal more interactive functionality, such as the ability to respond to user input (name and address forms), take customer orders for goods and services, clear credit card transactions on the fly, consult price and product databases, and even...
Conventional wisdom holds that to succeed in electronic commerce, you have to get in early. But in late 1999, Walmart decided to challenge that most sacred of web rules. After several years of tinkering with its website, watching while others broke new Internet ground, the retailing giant was ready to flex some cyber muscle. Up to that point, Walmart.com had realized modest success online, ranking 43rd among Internet shopping sites. It trailed web pioneers like eBay and Buy.com. In May...
Kindly answer Question 1-4 with well structured paragraphs. Alibaba-China's Ecommerce Giant: Challenging Amazon? TODAY, ALIBABA GROUP is the largest Chinese ecommerce company. In the original Arabic tale of Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves, Ali Baha, the poor woodcutter, opened the cave with hidden treasure by calling out the magic words "Open Sesame." Alibaba's founder selected the name to open up opportunities for small Chinese manufacturers to sell their goods around the world, with the hope of finding treasures for...
1. Consider a grocery supermarket planning to computerize their inventory management. The items on shelves will be marked with Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags and a set of RFID reader-devices will be installed for monitoring the movements of the tagged items. Each tag carries a 96-bit EPC (Electronic Product Code) with a Global Trade Identification number, which is an international standard. The RFID readers are installed on each shelf on the sales floor. The RFID system consists of two types...