scholarly journals Repurposing Materials and Waste through Online Exchanges: Overcoming the Last Hurdle

2015 ◽  
pp. n/a-n/a ◽  
Author(s):  
Suvrat Dhanorkar ◽  
Karen Donohue ◽  
Kevin Linderman
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Neha Sharma ◽  
Saurabh Sharma ◽  
Vatsal Sharma ◽  
Abhinav Utkarsh ◽  
Gaurang Bharadwaj

It is a period of online exchanges, managing daily installments through e-wallet for shopping, paying to merchant, also to fulfill all the liquid cash requirement through wallet money with no physical notes or currency involved for transaction, wallet exchange help to web advancements. The cash move and gross repayment is conceivable in only hardly any seconds. The web innovations have been utilizing and still new idea dependent on past encounters are currently coming into exploration and confab. A lot of research papers for wallet creation and inner cycle are accessible. Uncommonly, wallet measure through various methodologies like BC (Bank Channel) Wallet, RBI Wallet, Domestic Pay Service Wallet are principle thought in this exploration work. The exchange cycle faces numerous issues, these issues influence the backer, bank, client regarding misfortune in business. Whereas the client is additionally unsatisfied and unable to do finish wallet procedures. This paper presents a recreation examination of the versatility on simultaneous exchange handling over a combination of portable and fixed exchanges, because of moderate organization availability and down worker might be a similar exchange prepared twofold because of which RBI rules infringement happen and backer, client, bank, specialist all is grieved and misfortune the real business. This paper execution normally utilizes conflict location dependent on the Hidden label bases exchange accommodation through which copying any exchange is preposterous, it ensures that every exchange has prepared just a solitary path under RBI rules or wallet terms.


Author(s):  
Jing Quan

Electronic business (e-business) has been popularly lauded as “new economy.” As a result, firms are prompted to invest heavily in e-business related activities such as supplier/procurement and online exchanges. Whether the investments have actually paid off for the firms remain largely unknown. Using the data on the top 100 e-business leaders compiled by InternetWeek, the leaders are compared with their comparable counterparts in terms of profitability and cost in both the short-run and long-run. It is found that while the leaders have superior performance based on most of the profitability measurements, such superiority is not observed when cost measurements are used. Based on the findings, managerial implications are offered accordingly.


2008 ◽  
Vol 185 (2) ◽  
pp. 849-863 ◽  
Author(s):  
Subhajyoti Bandyopadhyay ◽  
John M. Barron ◽  
Alok R. Chaturvedi
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Norm Archer

Information systems that link businesses for the purpose of inter-organizational transfer of business transaction information (inter-organizational information systems, or IOIS) have been in use since the 1970s (Lankford & Riggs, 1996). Early systems relied on private networks, using electronic data interchange (EDI) or United Nations EDIFACT standards for format and content of transaction messages. Due to their cost and complexity, the use of these systems was confined primarily to large companies, but low-cost Internet commercialization has led to much more widespread adoption of IOIS. Systems using the Internet and the World Wide Web are commonly referred to as B2B (business-to-business) systems, supporting B2B electronic commerce. Technological innovations have led to several forms of B2B Internet implementations, often in the form of online exchanges. These are virtual marketplaces where buyers and sellers exchange information about prices, products, and service offerings, and negotiate business transactions. In addition to substituting proprietary lines of communication, emerging technologies and public networks have also facilitated new business models and new forms of interaction and collaboration, in areas such as collaborative product engineering or joint offerings of complex, modularized products. During the years 1999-2001 a number of online exchanges were introduced, but many of these failed (Gallaugher & Ramanathan, 2002), due mainly to an inability to attract participating business partners. Those that have survived are often owned by companies or consortia that are also exchange customers or suppliers. The objective of this overview is to describe the evolution and the characteristics of B2B Internet implementations, and to discuss management considerations, the evaluation and adoption of B2B applications, and the technical infrastructure supporting these systems. We also indicate some of the open issues that remain as the technology and its adoption continues to evolve.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoav Halperin

This article examines the growing public awareness of deceptive online campaigns where automated networks of social media bots are deployed to manipulate public opinion, disrupt debates, and stoke intercommunal strife. Drawing on a grounded thematic analysis of discussion threads that appeared on Israeli politicians’ Facebook pages during the lead-up to Israel’s national elections in April 2019, I argue that users’ frequent allusions and reactions to the presence of suspected manipulative agents allow these users to negotiate, challenge, and raise competing claims regarding whether certain prominent voices on social media are reflective of actual public opinion. As such, this article contributes to the emerging body of literature about online manipulation, which in recent years has focused mostly on examining the nature and scope of deceptive bot campaigns around the globe and on devising new techniques for detecting and countering the activities of fake social media accounts. The present investigation, in contrast, seeks to shift attention away from bots themselves and toward their intended targets: ordinary users and their discourse. In so doing, it aims to contribute to and expand the study of how automated manipulation is shaping contemporary social media environments by asking: What do ordinary users have to say about the deployment of political bots? How does users’ growing awareness of deceptive bot campaigns inform their interpretations of their own online experiences? And how do users leverage claims about bot activity in online exchanges with others to advance their political agendas?


2005 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Subhajyoti Bandyopadhyay ◽  
John M. Barron ◽  
Alok R. Chaturvedi
Keyword(s):  

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