RFC 2706 (rfc2706) - Page 3 of 13
ECML v1: Field Names for E-Commerce
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 2706 ECom Field Names October 1999
applications to browsers, as stand-alone applications, as browser
plug-ins, and as server-based applications. But the proliferation of
electronic wallets has been hampered by the lack of standards.
ECML (Electronic Commerce Modeling Language, ) Version
1 provides a set of simple guidelines for web merchants that will
enable electronic wallets from multiple vendors to fill in their web
forms. The end-result is that more consumers will find shopping on
the web to be easy and compelling.
The set of fields documented herein was developed by the
Wallet/Merchant Standards Alliance (www.ecml.org) which now includes,
in alphabetic order, the following:
American Express (www.americanexpress.com)
AOL (www.aol.com)
Brodia (www.brodia.com)
Compaq (www.compaq.com)
CyberCash (www.cybercash.com)
Discover (www.discovercard.com)
FSTC (www.fstc.org)
IBM (www.ibm.com)
Mastercard (www.mastercard.com)
Microsoft (www.microsoft.com)
Novell (www.novell.com)
SETCo (www.setco.org)
Sun Microsystems (www.sun.com)
Trintech (www.trintech.com)
Visa (www.visa.com)
The fields are derived from and consistent with the W3C P3P base data
schema at
.
1.2 Relationship to Other Standards
ECML Version 1 is not a replacement or alternative to SSL/TLS [RFC
2246], SET [SET], XML [XML], or IOTP [IOTP]. These are important
standards that provide functionality such as non-repudiatable
transactions, automatable payment scheme selection, and smart card
support.
ECML may be used with any payment mechanism. It simply allows a
merchant to publish consistent simple web forms.
Multiple wallets and multiple merchants plan to interoperably support
ECML. This is an open standard. ECML is designed to be simple.
Eastlake & Goldstein Informational