UNIT - V
UNIT - V
An electronic payment system is needed for compensation for information, goods and
services provided through the Internet - such as access to copyrighted materials, database
searches or consumption of system resources - or as a convenient form of payment for
external goods and services - such as merchandise and services provided outside the Internet.
it helps to automate sales activities, extends the potential number of customers and may
reduce the amount of paperwork.
REQUIREMENTS:
Security: payment systems are very likely to become a target for criminal attacks.flexibility:
different models for different situations (anonymity, accountability, risk).computational
efficiency: support for micropayment; per-transaction cost must be small enough so that they
are insignificant.
Payment Methods:
secure (or non-secure) presentation: the customer provides credit card information over a
secure (or even clear) transportation means.
Customer Registration: the customer gets a password or digital signature based on a credit
card (hides the credit card information from the merchant, but still clears through the credit
card).
Credit-Debit Instruments: similar to customer registration but only one bill per month
either through credit card or debit check.
Electronic Currency: this method has potential for anonymity but requires tamper resistant
hardware.
Server Scrip: the customer gets a kind of coupons from an agent that can be spend only with
one particular merchant. this reduces the risk of double spending and allows off-line
transactions.
Direct Transfer: the customer initiates the transfer of funds to the account of the merchant.
this method provides no anonymity.
Collection Agent: the merchant refers the customer to a third party who collects payment
using one of the methods mentioned above.
• Electronic payment systems are proliferating in banking, retail, health care, on-line markets,
and even government—in fact, anywhere money needs to change hands.
• Organizations are motivated by the need to deliver products and services more cost
effectively and to provide a higher quality of service to customers.
• The emerging electronic payment technology labeled electronic funds transfer (EFT).
• Retailing payments
• There are many ways that exist for implementing an e-cash system, all must incorporate a
few common features.
1. Monetary value
2. Interoperability
3. Retrievability
The purchase of e-cash from an on-line currency server (or bank) involves two steps:
Some customers might prefer to purchase e-cash with paper currency, either to maintain
anonymity or because they don‘t have a bank account.
• Once the tokens are purchased, the e-cash software on the customer‘s PC stores digital
money undersigned by a bank.
• The users can spend the digital money at any shop accepting e-cash, without having to open
an account there or having to transmit credit card numbers.
• As soon as the customer wants to make a payment, the software collects the necessary
amount from the stored tokens
Electronic Checks
• In the given model shown in fig, buyers must register with third-party account server before
they are able to write electronic checks.
• Smart cards have been in existence since the early 1980s and hold promise for secure
transactions using existing infrastructure.
• Smart cards are credit and debit cards and other card products enhanced with
microprocessors capable of holding more information than the traditional magnetic stripe.
• The smart card technology is widely used in countries such as France, Germany, Japan, and
Singapore to pay for public phone calls, transportation, and shopper loyalty programs.
– Electronic Purses, which replace money, are also known as debit cards and
electronic money.
– It includes access to multiple accounts, such as debit, credit, cash access, bill
payment & multiple access options at multiple locations
Electronic Purses
• To replace cash and place a financial instrument are racing to introduce ―electronic
purses‖, wallet-sized smart cards embedded with programmable microchips that store sums
of money for people to use instead of cash for everything
2. It verifies card is authentic & it has enough money, the value is deducted from
balance on the card & added to an e-cash & remaining balance is displayed by the vending
machine.
Payment cards are all types of plastic cards that consumers use to make purchases:
– Credit cards
• Such as a Visa or a MasterCard, has a preset spending limit based on the user‘s
credit limit.
– Debit cards
• Removes the amount of the charge from the cardholder‘s account and transfers it to
the seller‘s bank.
– Charge cards
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
– Payment card service companies charge merchants per-transaction fees and monthly
processing fees.
• Electronic cash is a general term that describes the attempts of several companies to create
value storage and exchange system that operates online in much the same way that
government-issued currency operates in the physical world.
– Privacy
– Security
– Independence
– Portability
– Convenience
• A merchant bank or acquiring bank is a bank that does business with merchants who want
to accept payment cards.
Two methods
– On-line
– Off-line
• Customer's risks
– Dishonest merchant
• Merchant‘s risk
– Disputed charges
• Atomic transactions
• Anonymity of buyer
• Security. A secure system verifies the identity of two-party transactions through ―user
authentication‖ & reserves flexibility to restrict information/services through access control
• Database integration. With home banking, for ex, a customer wants to play with all his
accounts.
• Brokers. A ―network banker‖-someone to broker goods & services, settle conflicts, &
fiinancial transactions electronically-must be in place
• Pricing. One fundamental issue is how to price payment system services. For e.g., from cash
to bank payments, from paper-based to e-cash. The problem is potential waste of resources.
• Standards. Without standards, the welding of different payment users into different
networks & different systems is impossible.