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E - e-Commerce/e-business to European Union Directive on Privacy and Electronic Commerce 2002

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 May 2010

Robert Plant
Affiliation:
University of Miami
Stephen Murrell
Affiliation:
University of Miami
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Summary

Definition: e-Commerce/e-business are business models that utilize the internet as a mechanism through which companies, vendors, and customers interact.

Overview

e-Commerce originated with the deregulation of the internet in 1995. It was originally conceived as a business-to-customer (B2C) model of commerce, and corporations were formed to provide services and products over the internet without having any physical retail presence (e.g., Amazon.com, the well-known online book seller).

The term e-Business was coined by Lou Gerstner, then CEO of IBM, who looked beyond the B2C model to use the internet for delivering services and supporting physical business channels.

The start-up companies that adopted pure B2C commerce, for which there is no physical retail store, together with startup business-to-business (B2B) organizations, which also owned no physical retailing or warehousing capacity, aimed to “disintermediate” the established companies by having lower internal and distribution-channel costs. Unfortunately, this model proved to be very expensive to support as the businesses attempted to scale up and reach profitability, and the majority ran out of capital following the decline in the US stock market of 2000 and closed down. Those that survived the stock-market crash endured a market consolidation and continue to attempt to build market share, drive down costs, and become profitable or maintain profitability.

Type
Chapter
Information
An Executive's Guide to Information Technology
Principles, Business Models, and Terminology
, pp. 123 - 142
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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References

Plant, R. (2000). e-Commerce: Formulation of Strategy (Englewood Cliffs, NJ, Prentice-Hall).Google Scholar
Associated terminology: Internet, Dynamic web pages, W3C.
Wirth, N. (1978). Algorithms plus Data Structures Equals Programs (Englewood Cliffs, NJ, Prentice-Hall).Google Scholar
D.Knuth, E. (1975). Fundamental Algorithms (New York, Addison-Wesley).Google Scholar
Hofi, M. (1975). Analysis of Algorithms (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Associated terminology: Computability, Complexity.
http://www.x12.org/x12org/international/index.html.
http://www.unece.org/trade/untdid/.
http://www.cenorm.be/default.htm.
Associated terminology: XML, X.12, Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
Wood, D. and Stone, M. (1999). Programming Internet Email (Sebastopol, CA, O'Reilly Press).Google Scholar
Cobb, S. (2002). Privacy for Business: Web Sites and Email (Saint Augustine, FL, Dreva Hill LLC).Google Scholar
Associated terminology: Instant messaging.
Needham, R. and Schroeder, M. (1978). “Using encryption for authentication in large networks of computers,” Communications of the A. C. M., Volume 21, No. 12.
Schneier, B. (1996). Applied Cryptography (New York, John Wiley and Sons).Google Scholar
http://www.bxa.doc.gov/encryption/MassMarket_Keys64bitsNUp.html.
Associated terminology: Public key–private key, One-way hash, Password.
Mahmood, M. (2005). Advanced Topics in End User Computing Series, 2nd edn. (Hershey, PA, Idea Group Publishing).
Associated terminology: ERP, Visual Basic.
M. Smith (2004). “Portals: toward an application framework for interoperability,” Communications of the A. C. M., Volume 47, No. 10.CrossRef
Associated terminology: ERP, Legacy system.
O, D.'Leary (2000). Enterprise Resource Planning Systems (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Associated terminology: XML, Operating system.
P. Chen> (1976). “The entity-relationship model – toward a unified view of data,” A. C. M. Transactions on Database Systems, Volume 1, No. 1.CrossRef
Associated terminology: UML.
C.Spurgeon, E. (2000). Ethernet: The Definitive Guide (Sebastopol, CA, O'Reilly Press).Google Scholar
Stevens, W. (1994). TCP/IP Illustrated (New York, Addison-Wesley).
Kimball, R. and Caserta, J. (2004). The Data Warehouse ETL Toolkit: Practical Techniques for Extracting, Cleaning, Conforming and Delivering Data (New York, John Wiley and Sons).Google Scholar
Official Journal of the European Communities, L 201/37, 2002.
US Department of Commerce (2000). Safe Harbor Privacy Principles, Issues (Washington, DC, US Department of Commerce).
Associated terminology: Law cross-reference.

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