Online
Shopping Security
SSL or Secure
Sockets Layer is a security protocol created by Netscape that has
become an international standard on the Internet for exchanging sensitive
information between a website and the computer communicating with it,
referred to as the client.
SSL technology
is embedded in all popular browsers and engages automatically when the
user connects to a web server that is SSL-enabled.
When your
browser connects to an SSL server, it automatically asks the server for
a digital Certificate of Authority (CA). This digital certificate positively
authenticates the server's identity to ensure you will not be sending
sensitive data to a hacker or imposter site. The browser also makes sure
the domain name matches the name on the CA, and that the CA has been generated
by a trusted authority and bears a valid digital signature. If all goes
well you will not even be aware this handshake has taken place.
However,
if there is a glitch with the CA, even if it is simply out of date, your
browser will pop up a window to inform you of the exact problem it encountered,
allowing you to end the session or continue at your own risk.
Once the
handshake is completed, your browser will automatically encrypt all information
that you send to the site, before it leaves your computer. Encrypted information
is unreadable en route. Once the information arrives at the secure server,
it is decrypted using a secret key. If the server sends information back
to you, that information is also encrypted at the server's end before
being sent. Your browser will decrypt it for you automatically upon arrival,
then display it as it normally does.
Another feature
of SSL technology is the ability to authenticate data so that an interceder
cannot substitute another transmission for the actual transmission without
being detected.
For further
information on the security used on this website, please visit www.geotrust.com
|