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ECommerce I

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Title: ECommerce I


1
E-Commerce I
  • Competency EC05.00 Analyze Legislation Affecting
    E-Businesses.
  • Objective EC05.02b Analyze Legislation Concerning
    Internet Security Issues

2
Secure websites
  • Definition
  • Security confirmation

3
What is a secure website?
  • A secure website is one that uses data
    encryption to protect all information.

4
How can you tell a site is secure?
  • There are three ways to confirm that a website
    is secure
  • Click the VeriSign icon to verify that the
    certificate is valid.
  • A secure page should include a small padlock
    symbol displayed on the bottom line of your
    browser.
  • On a secure page, in the browser address box, the
    URL will begin with an https prefix rather than
    the standard http prefix. The s means that the
    page is secure.

5
Identity theft
  • Definition
  • Types of identity theft
  • Examples of identity theft
  • Protect against identity theft

6
Definition
  • Any instance where a person uses someone else's
    identification documents or other identifiers in
    order to impersonate that person.
  • It intrudes into many areas of peoples daily
    lives.

7
Types of identity theft
  • Financial fraud - includes bank fraud, credit
    card fraud, computer and telecommunications
    fraud, social program fraud, tax refund fraud,
    mail fraud, and several more.

8
Types of identity theft
  • Criminal activities - involves taking on someone
    else's identity in order to commit a crime, enter
    a country, obtain special permits, hide one's own
    identity, or commit acts of terrorism.

9
Types of identity theft
  • Credit card fraud is identity theft in its most
    simple and common form. It can be accomplished
    either by a thief who steals your account number
    or when your pre-approved credit card offers fall
    into the wrong hands.

10
Examples of identity theft
  • Common modes of identity theft
  • Dumpster diving - Dug out of trash cans and
    dumpsters
  • Memorized or copied by sales clerks and waiters
  • Removed from mailboxes in the form of tax
    notices, financial account statements, and other
    bills
  • Removed from your employer's files, either
    secretly or with the help of an inside accomplice
  • Removed from hospital records, usually with the
    help of an inside accomplice
  • Removed from your financial lender's files

11
More Examples of identity theft
  • Common modes of identity theft
  • Removed from your landlord's files
  • Purchased (or found free) in online (or offline)
    databases
  • Collected from "cloned" Web sites - someone may
    recreate a legitimate merchant Web site in order
    to capture your personal information and credit
    card information when you place an order.
  • Stolen from a merchant database through computer
    hacking (not as simple as other forms of theft)
  • Snatched using software that mirrors keystrokes
    to capture credit card account information

12
Ways to protect yourself
  • DON'T give out your Social Security number unless
    its critical.
  • DESTROY any unwanted credit card offers.
  • ONLY include your name and address on checks.
  • SHRED (cross-cut) any sensitive documents before
    discarding.
  • DON'T carry your Social Security card, passport,
    or birth certificate in your wallet or purse.
  • REVIEW your credit report annually to verify its
    accuracy.

13
More Ways to protect yourself
  • NEVER give out personal information on the phone
    to someone you don't know and who initiated the
    call.
  • REVIEW your credit card statement each month to
    make sure there are no unauthorized charges.
  • DON'T mail bills or documents that contain
    personal data (like tax forms or checks) from
    your personal mail box.
  • If you're ever denied credit, FIND OUT WHY.
  • REACT QUICKLY if a creditor calls about charges
    you didn't make.
  • GUARD deposit slips as closely as you do checks.

14
What is Netiquette?
  • "Netiquette" is network etiquette, the do's and
    don'ts of online communication.
  • Netiquette includes both common courtesy online
    and the informal "rules of the road" of
    cyberspace.
  • In other words, Netiquette is a set of rules for
    behaving properly online.

15
Core Rules of Netiquette
  • Rule 1 Remember the Human
  • Rule 2 Adhere to the same standards of behavior
    online that you follow in real life
  • Rule 3 Know where you are in cyberspace
  • Rule 4 Respect other people's time and bandwidth
  • Rule 5 Make yourself look good online
  • Rule 6 Share expert knowledge
  • Rule 7 Help keep flame wars under control
  • Rule 8 Respect other people's privacy
  • Rule 9 Don't abuse your power
  • Rule 10 Be forgiving of other people's mistakes
  • http//www.albion.com/netiquette/corerules.html

16
Sources
  • Electronic Commerce. 1999. http//www.wapa.gov/C
    orpSrvs/procurmt/ecomm.htm (2 Jan 2006).
  • Stein, Lincoln D. WWW Security FAQ Whats New.
    2000. http//www.w3.org/Security/Faq/www-security-
    faq.html (2 Jan 2006)
  • Strom, David. The Challenge of Electronic
    Commerce Selling Lemonade has Never Been This
    Tough. 2000. http//www.strom.com/pubwork/ecommer
    ce.html (2 Jan. 2006).
  • Bureau of Industry and Security. US Department
    of Commerce http//www.bis.doc.gov/ComplianceAndEn
    forcement/E-Commerce.htm (2 Jan 2006)
  • Electronic Commerce NC WiseOwl http//www.mywiseow
    l.com/articles/Electronic_commerce (2 Jan 2006)
  • Kennedy, Dennis, An Internet Tool Kit for
    E-Commerce Law Jan 15, 2001 The John Marshall Law
    School (2 Jan 2006)
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