Securing e-business applications and communications

Bibliographic Information

Securing e-business applications and communications

Jonathan S. Held, John R. Bowers

Auerbach, c2001

  • : pbk

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Note

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Take a walk through the process of setting up a secure E-commerce Web site with Securing E-Business Applications and Communications. In this book, you get a brief but comprehensive look at the fundamental and important cornerstones of E-commerce: from the basics of security to the development and implementation of an actual E-commerce site. Written with the heterogeneous network in mind, it includes implementation examples for Unix (Solaris and Linux), Windows NT 4.0, and Windows 2000. The authors pay particular attention to the security issues involved. They also highlight the plethora of encryption algorithms that are instrumental in securing data. Rather than burden you with the intimate details of these algorithms, the authors cover "the pieces" that so many other texts miss. Together, you and the authors develop a site from concept to implementation. Numerous coding examples illustrate the how-tos of the most current technologies - from Microsoft, Sun, and others - to support secure transactions. They also explore the most popular web servers, the technologies that drive them, and commercial utilities that can be used to manage them remotely. While there are plenty of expensive, shrink-wrapped packages that claim to do everything you need, nothing is better than rolling up your sleeves, getting your hands dirty, and learning how the technology works. Spend some time doing that now and you'll save yourself a bundle of money over the long haul. There is no other comprehensive, step-by-step guide on how to create a secure e-commerce site than Securing E-Business Applications and Communications. Without it, you will spend countless hours finding the information it contains.

Table of Contents

E-COMMERCE: THE WHAT AND THE WHY. The Digital Revolution. Security. Encryption. Standards. Summary. A Prelude of Things to Come. THE NEED FOR SECURITY: LEARNING FROM OTHER'S MISTAKES. A Tangled Web Is Weaved. CGI by Example. Hello PHF. Thinking Like a Hacker. Adding Automation to the Task. Properly Handling CGI. Keep the Noise Down. Know What Thy Foe Knows. PASSWORDS: SECURITY'S WEAKEST LINK. The Heart of the Problem. Contending with the Internet. Statistics Don't Lie. The Mathematics of Passwords. UNIX and Linux. Windows 95/Windows 98. Windows NT 4.0. Windows 2000. UNIX/Linux. Recommendations. Electronic Business (E-Business). Arpanet-Precursor of a Digital Revolution. Awash in Buzzwords. Business and the Internet. E-Business Models. DATA ENCRYPTION. Monoalphabetic Substitution. Polyalphabetic Substitution. Commercial Encryption Standards. Closing Thoughts. HASH ALGORITHMS. Message Digest (MD) Hash Functions. SHA-1 Hash Function. Understanding the Java Hashing Program. A Practical Web-Based Java Cryptography Example. Concluding Thoughts. AUTHENTICATION PROTOCOLS AND PRETTY GOOD PRIVACY (PGP). Kerberos History. X.509 Certificate Introduction and History. Concluding Thoughts. SECURE REMOTE MANAGEMENT. The Windows 2000 Telnet Service. Secure Shell (SSH-1 And SSH-2). FTP, Secure FTP, and SCP. Virtual Network Comptuer (VNC). Virtual Private Networking (VPN). Concluding Thoughts. THE TECHNOLOGY THAT ENABLES E-COMMERCE. Developing Client/Server RDBMS Applications Using Java Servlets and JDBC. JDBC Applications. Web Servers. Microsoft's Active Server. Command Object. Concluding Thoughts. CONCLUSION. Some Final Key Points.

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Details
  • NCID
    BA58373798
  • ISBN
    • 0849309638
  • LCCN
    2001022344
  • Country Code
    us
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Boca Raton, Fla.
  • Pages/Volumes
    x, 347 p.
  • Size
    26 cm
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