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As a working tool for professionals, this easy-to-understand resource provides clear, detailed guidance on smart, credit and debit cards, JavCard and OpenCard Framework.
Smart cards play an increasingly important role in everyday life. We encounter them as credit cards, loyalty cards, electronic purses, health cards, ands as secure tokens for authentication or digital signatures. Their small size and the compatibility of their form with the magnetic stripe card make them ideal carriers of personal information such as secret keys, passwords, customization profiles, and medical emergency information. This book provides a guide for the rapid development of smart card applications using Java and the OpenCard Framework. It gives you the basic information you need about smart cards and how they work. A smart card provided with the book will help you to obtain first-hand experience.
Annotation "This book is a guide to developing applications with Java Card technology. It introduces you to the Java Card platform and features discussions of programming concepts. It also provides a step-by-step Java Card applet development guide to get you up and running." "Specific topics covered include: smart card basics; Java Card virtual machine; persistent and transient objects; atomicity and transactions; handling APDUs; applet firewall and object sharing; Java Card platform security; a step-by-step applet development guide; applet optimization guidelines; and a comprehensive reference to Java Card APIs."--BOOK JACKET. Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Radu, an electrical engineer who works as a consultant for payment systems and telecom operations in Belgium, has written a thorough description of EMV chip card technology. Following a description of chip migration with EMV and its use for debit and credit cards, Radu details the processing of such cards, including remote card payments, with attention to various formats. A lengthy section of appendices details the technology's security framework, threats, services, mechanisms, and risk management. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
Overviews the techniques and payment systems used to allow payments to be made across the Internet. After an introduction to cryptography, the authors (Trinity College) explain credit-card based systems, electronic checks, account transfers, electronic cash payment systems, and micropayment systems. The second edition adds a chapter on mobile commerce. c. Book News Inc.
A practical guide to the specification, design, and programming of smart card systems for working applications. More than 3 billion smartcards are produced every year. Generally defined as any pocket-sized card with embedded integrated circuits or chips, they have a huge number of applications including travel cards, chip and pin cards, pet tags, mobile phone SIMs and pallet trackers. Now with modern Smart Card technology such as Java Card and Basic Card it is possible for everyone to create his or her own applications on a smart card. This book provides generic solutions for programming smart cards, enabling the creation of working applications and systems. Key features: Presents a comprehensive introduction to the topic of smart cards, explaining component elements and the smart card microcontrollers. Sets out information on operating systems with case studies of a range of applications including credit card security, mobile phones and transport payment cards. Gives detailed advice on the monitoring of smart card applications, recognizing potential attacks on security and improving system integrity. Provides modules and examples so that all types of systems can be built up from a small number of individual components. Offers guidelines on avoiding and overcoming design errors. Ideal for practising engineers and designers looking to implement smart cards in their business, it is also a valuable reference for postgraduate students taking courses on embedded system and smart card design.
Multi-application smart cards have yet to realise their enormous potential, partly because few people understand the technology, market, and behavioural issues involved. Here, Mike Hendry sets out to fill this knowledge gap with a comprehensive and accessible guide. Following a review of the state-of-the-art in smart card technology, the book describes the business requirements of each smart-card-using sector, and the systems required to support multiple applications. Implementation aspects, including security, are treated in detail and numerous international case studies cover identity, telecoms, banking and transportation applications. Lessons are drawn from these studies to help deliver more successful projects in the future. Invaluable for users and integrators specifying, evaluating and integrating multi-application systems, the book will also be useful to terminal, card and system designers; network, IT and security managers; and software specialists.