E-commerce (EC)
School of Information Technology and Engineering
511 E-commerce Basic IT Infrastructure (3:3:0).
Discusses the basic networking infrastructure used
in ecommerce environments and the typical
multi-tiered ecommerce architectures of e-commerce sites. The
ISO OSI Reference Architecture. Functions and main
features of the IP protocol. Functions and main features of the
TCP protocol: connection establishment, error control,
congestion control. The HTTP protocol. Load balancers, web
servers, application servers, and databases servers in
an e-commerce site architecture. Software architecture
elements such as servlets, transaction processing
services, remote method invocation, CGI scripts, and active
server pages are discussed.
512 E-commerce Software Services (3:3:0).
Prerequisite: EC 511. Flow analysis of e-commerce transactions and
the role of the various software servers (web servers,
application servers, and database servers) in executing
e-commerce transactions. Examples of various technologies are used
to illustrate typical designs. Protocols used for
authentication and payment in e-commerce. Introduction to
symmetric and public-key encryption. Digital signatures.
Digital certificates. The Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protocol.
The Transport Layer Service (TLS) protocol. Secure
electronic payment protocols.
521/MBA 603 Managerial Economics and Decisions
of the Firm (3:3:0). Prerequisite: Admission to M.S.
in ECommerce program. Provides a fundamental
understanding of how microeconomics concepts are usefully
applied to managerial decision making Principles of
microeconomic theory are explored fully, including market supply and
demand, production and cost functions, industry
structure, and product and resource pricing.
522/MBA 613 Financial Reporting and Decision
Making (3:3:0). Prerequisite: Admission to M.S. in
ECommerce
program. Foundation course focusing on the economics
and analysis of business transactions and related financial
reporting issues. Topics include an introduction to the
accounting framework used in financial reporting,
analysis of economic events and their impact on financial
reports, analysis of the impact of accounting method choices
on financial reports, and financial statement analysis.
531/PUBP 726 Law and Public Policy in
E-commerce (3:3:0). Legal and policy framework applicable to the
use of advanced communications and information
technology. Review of the history of electronic communications
regulation in the United States and current transformations
of this legal system. International aspects of global
networks, including WTO and WIPO international agreements,
European privacy directives, and U.S. experiences.
Overview of salient public policy issues associated with
e-commerce deployment: Internet taxation, regulatory issues,
digital divide, transborder data flow, spectrum allocation,
privacy, authentication, policy, wireless, UCITA, and others.
Lectures, guest speakers from government electronic
commerce regulators, practical exercises, hands-on demonstrations.
541 Integrative Case Studies in Electronic
Commerce (3:3:0). Open to EC majors only. Prerequisites: EC
511, 521, and 531. Students apply knowledge and skills
from core courses to manage the complexity of e-commerce
in specialized applications. Using case study methods,
students analyze and synthesize the requirements for
successful e-commerce program development and management
in industry-specific applications in health care,
banking, retail, and government.
600 Group Project in Electronic Commerce
(3-6:3-6:0). Prerequisite: Completion of all core courses and at least
9 credits in the specialization area of the M.S. in
Ecommerce program. Group projects in electronic commerce
selected to illustrate special problems and solutions in
development, design, and implementation of e-commerce systems.
The final project will be exhibited to a panel of judges
composed of faculty members and experts from private
and government organizations.
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