Title: E-Commerce for Developing Countries (EC-DC)
1E-Commerce for Developing Countries (EC-DC)
- Krastu Mirski
- Deputy Director BDT
- Chief Field Operations Department
2Agenda EC-DC
- Objectives
- Technology Used
- Status of Activities
- Solutions and Services
- Partners and Participants
- Recommendations
- Conclusion
3Objectives of EC-DC
- 1. Assistance in E-business Infrastructureby
working with industry partners to build secure
and trusted infrastructure for e-services. - 2. Build Local Capacity in E-business
Technologies by organizing training workshops and
seminars. - 3. Address E-business Policy and Strategy Issues
by providing guidance on appropriate strategies
and policies for E-commerce development. - 4. Forge Neutral and Non-Exclusive Alliances by
establishing a broad range of partnership
agreements with public and private sector to
assist the ITU and its mission.
4Technology Used
- Challenges In a world where parties to a
transaction do not meet physically, how do you - Ensure that you are transacting with the right
person? gt Authentication - Make sure that confidential information can only
be viewed by the intended recipient? gt
Encryption - Ensure that data is not modified by unauthorized
third party or while on transit? gt Data
integrity - Make sure that transactions can not be denied
after concluded ? gt Digital signatures - Choice of technology is to respond to these
challenges by providing secure and cost-effective
solutions to developing countries.
5Who are You Transacting With?
but in e-business, it is important to Know if
you are dealing with a dog.
6 Technology
- Public Key Infrastructure (PKIX)
- The set of hardware, software, people and
procedures needed to build trust and security for
electronic transactions. - Public-Key Virtual Private Networks
- ITU-T X.509 Digital (Identity) Certificates
- Strong Software and Hardware Authentication
- Certification and Registration Authorities
- Attribute Certificates and Identity Certificates
- Online Certificate Validation (OCSP,SCVP, CLR)
7Status of Activities
- Launched in March 1998, at the ITU WTDC in
Valletta, Malta and has expanded from e-commerce
to global deployment of e-transactions
infrastructure. - Cited in Time Magazine (July 2000) and many
national and international media as an activity
to watch out for. - Largest e-transaction infrastructure project (110
countries) - International Security Review (April
2001). - Partnership Agreements signed with the World
Trade Centre (WTC), WISeKey and FUNDANDINA. - An Activity of the BDT since September 1998.
8Status of Activities
- Support of several leading ICT companies with
more than 7 million already contributed. - Other Projects and activities operational in
Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America and the Arab
Region. - Conference for 120 countries (27-29 Nov 2000) at
the ITU HQ in Geneva. - Center for training and development created as a
result of Partnership Agreement with FUNDANINA
More than 30 courses in ICT already provided by
center. - New framework for extended cooperation being
created for neutral and non-exclusive
participation of governments, private sector and
international organizations.
9Status
More than 500 participants from 128 countries
and internet security experts met at ITU HQ in
Geneva for 3 days to launch the World Internet
Secure Infrastructure for developing countries.
Launching of one of the largest deployment of
secure electronic transaction infrastructure for
100 developing countries from all regions. An
African delegate watching live PKI demo at the
ITU-WISeKey Secure Electronic Commerce
Partnership Conference at the ITU HQ in Nov 2000
10Solutions and Services
Multi-Platform (Fixed, Mobile and DVB)
Component-Based Architecture
Verifiable Chain of Trust (e-trust)
Integrity, Confidentiality, Non-repudiation
E-Payments and Financial Services
E-Business, E-Government E-services
11Solutions and Services
Certification Authority for DCs and LDCs
Secure B2B Electronic Market Place
Highly Secure authenticated communication
Generic Infrastructure for E-transactions
Technology Neutral Registration Authority
Cohesive Technology for E-Transactions
12Secure B2B e-marketplace Strong End-User
Authentication using Tokens and Smart Cards
13Partners 113 Countries
- Agreements with
- FUNDANDINA, WISeKey and WTC
- Participation of
- Ministries of ITU Members States
- Telecom Operators and Regulators
- National Banks and Financial Institutions
- Trade Points and Business Organisations
- Internet Service Providers
- Regional Telecommunication Organisations
- Private Businesses and NGOs
- Chamber of Commerce Trade Centres
- More than 225 organisations and Leading ICT
- companies.
14Recommendations
- Developing Countries need to Speedup
Transformation into Digital Economy. - It is urgent to Migrate from Traffic to Content
Delivery Networks. - Important to Adopt Strategies to Address Market
Convergence. - There is a need to Forge Alliances and Strategic
Partnerships. - Operators need to Capitalize on Existing
Customer-base and Brand Name.
15Recommendations
- Policy-makers need to Adopt Appropriate Policies
for Internet and ICT Access. - Create Favorable Regulatory Environment for
Mobile Services, Broadband IP and Convergent
Services. - Provide Payment Services to Businesses and
Consumers. - Adopt Appropriate Legislative Framework for
E-Transactions.
16Conclusion
- Thank you
- for your attention.
- For more information, please visit
http//www.itu.int/ecdc