Title :
Electronic commerce infrastructure
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Paris VI Univ., France
Abstract :
Electronic commerce (E-commerce) is all the rage these days. About 100 million users and at least one million businesses already reachable via the Internet have made it that way. This critical mass compares to the market economy of North America, Japan or Europe. But doing business electronically means shifting critical business processes to open networks. It also means connecting back-end business applications in a secure and flexible way. Is there anything preventing the continued proliferation of this economy? Yes. A software infrastructure that allows all participants to carry out business transactions is still lacking. As a result, specialty market reference architectures are still needed to help identify important players, roles and relationships of the various markets and their participants. These architectures define the major components these participants require to carry out business transactions in that particular market. By defining interfaces and the semantics of the involved services, reference architectures provide patterns for software developers. These patterns help the software developers to implement coherent pacts to the overall electronic market system
Keywords :
Internet; contracts; data privacy; electronic commerce; security of data; E-commerce; Internet; back-end business applications; business transactions; critical business processes; electronic commerce infrastructure; electronic market system; market economy; open networks; reference architectures; semantics; software developers; software infrastructure; specialty market reference architectures; Access protocols; Buildings; Consumer electronics; Context-aware services; Contracts; Costs; Electronic commerce; Insurance; Large Hadron Collider; Security;
Journal_Title :
Potentials, IEEE