Thursday, August 14, 2008

Normally, A High Risk Merchant Would Find A Way To Counter Hackers From Getting Access To The Download Page

Category: Finance.

It's not for the geeks.



Most popular among these is the e- book. Many online sellers aren' t bothered so much by copyright infringement as they are of losing money by theft of their online products. Guess we already know why those who are selling e- books are considered high risk merchants: the sole fact that the e- book they are selling can be easily downloaded for free( without being dubbed" freeware" or" shareware" ) makes them vulnerable to frauds and chargebacks in the long run. Of course it would be extremely helpful( and imperative) to learn how to do it before launching the e- book for paid download. Now, some first time e- book sellers are not savvy when it comes to protecting their products online. It would be worth taking a look at my past article" What Every High Risk Merchant Should Know About Intellectual Property Rights" to find out more about what you can and cannot do on a legal basis when it comes to online product theft. Normally, a high risk merchant would find a way to counter hackers from getting access to the download page.


IT's IN THE PACKAGING, SILLY! But this takes a certain degree of skill. Amazon does it. E- book sellers can find relief from download piracy by simply packaging the product into the Adobe Acrobat. pdf format. All other online book sellers do it so only an image of the book page can be captured. You would need to watermark it to prevent it from being stolen.


The same goes for images. TREASURE YOUR SOURCE CODE. Paypal has a way of helping high risk merchants to do this using a little bit of programming in the order button code. But a prepared online seller always knows how to attack a hacker even before he takes advantage of his download webpage's source code. However, this method is quite faulty and you may still end up with a hacked page and not a dime of deposit from your customer's shopping cart. Your best bet is to find providers who can sell you script to protect your source code so that hackers will not be able to bypass the payment page and download your e- book for zilch.


Encrypting pages that do not reveal source codes in the drop down menu is a good technique. The bottom line here is to never expose your source code for all the world to see. The homemade remedy is for you( or your programmer) to tinker with your webpage structure so that hackers will get confused. DODGING SEARCH ENGINE SPIDERS. Make it difficult for anyone( even the search engines! ) to access your download pages by using sub- directories( three levels down are best) or separate download pages. As you replace water from your flower vase every week, so should you rename your download link every now and then. You will need to add redirect pages on your webpage while the sub- directories will make it harder for search engines to pick up the url and display it on the search results.


Some high risk merchants would simply give customers access to the download page when they are able to make a deposit for the e- book they wish to download. I would say whatever technique that I have mentioned here works for you, suit yourself!

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