E-commerce Security: VeriSign North Dakota

Learn how online commerce keeps your credit cards safe.

Local Companies

Red River Software
(701) 281-0781
2311 45th St S Ste B
Fargo, ND
Microsoft
(701) 281-6500
3900 Great Plains Dr S
Fargo, ND
Aatrix Software
(701) 746-6801
2100 Library Cir
Grand Forks, ND
Diamond Municipal Solutions
(701) 232-6631
417 Main Ave Ste 401
Fargo, ND
Professional Advantage
(701) 235-2363
3001 25th St S
Fargo, ND
Bbsi Inc
(701) 323-9200
407 E Main Ave
Bismarck, ND
Dfc Consultants Ltd
(701) 223-8647
711 Riverwood Dr Ste 2
Bismarck, ND
Ecliptic Technologies Inc
(701) 297-8098
319 5th St N
Fargo, ND
1st Choice Technology
(701) 833-5455
Minot, ND
Bradoc Data Management Inc
(701) 746-7441
11 4th St S
Fargo, ND

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Originally published at Internet.com


September is security month at Earthweb and I was asked if I could write something dealing with e-commerce. Since I had just finished the process of getting my own VeriSign certificate, I was fairly familiar with what needed to be done to start accepting credit cards over the Web. If you're thinking of starting an e-business, or if you just want to attempt to understand how your credit card is kept safe while you are using it on the Web, read on. This should help you a great deal.

I will never give my credit card number to anyone on the Web! It's not safe!



Ah, but you'll tell your credit card number to a complete stranger at a mail order company over the phone, or give it to a waiter who then waltzes out of the room with it, or hand it to a person behind a counter who makes a paper swipe of the number.

Now that I've been through the process of actually implimenting a server ID and Secure Socket Layer (SSL) on a Web site, I can honestly say that of all the methods of delivering a credit card number, I personally feel safest using the Web.

Contrary to popular belief, your card number does not simply go out into cyberspace for anyone with a computer to steal. It does not (or should not, if the company does it correctly) sit in a file just waiting to be hacked. Plus, and this is the real kicker, you know exactly who is getting the card number. Once that waiter leaves the room, any one of 1,000 different people can get the number. If the waiter is crooked, one phone call later and his buddy has your number and is selling it around town...

Read article at Internet.com site

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