As the technology is developing very rapidly many changes in web are taking place, the innovators are doing their best to improve the web with their new inventions, if we just think once about the changes that have taken place in a decade, we admire them, the world wide web consortium has told the world about the publication of XML encryption syntax and processing and decryption transform, if w3c indicates anything which means the recommendation which it does is stable and it contributes to web in many ways, and interoperability is easy with
It is very convenient to connect an HTML presentation directly to XML data for interium updates because XML data and web services become more wide spread, Microsoft first implemented the XMLHttp request object in internet explorer 5 for windows as an ActiveX object, the same functionality is covered in a proposed W3C standard document object model in the mean time growing support for the XMLHttp request object means that it has become the de facto standard that will likely be supported even after the W3C specifications become final and it starts
The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) has announced the publication of XML Encryption Syntax and Processing and Decryption Transform for XML Signature as W3C Recommendations, signifying a "cross-industry agreement on an XML-based approach for securing XML data in a document. A W3C Recommendation indicates that a specification is stable, contributes to Web interoperability, and has been reviewed by the W3C Membership, who favor its widespread adoption." The Encryption document "specifies a process for encrypting data and representing the result in XML. The
Debates on the XML-DEV and XSL mailing lists over the last two weeks concern the futures of XSLT, XPath, and, the latest addition to the W3C XML toolkit, XML Query. There are no signs of these debates ending this week. Discussion on XML-DEV about the design of XML Query rages on.
Reinventing the Wheel
The focus of last week's XML-Deviant was the concern expressed by several XML-DEV contributors that the interdependence of several W3C specifications may have exceeded the dictates of software reuse and become instead a tangled mess. Suggestions were
Abstract:
XML is a global standard for the Internet and e-business, and its use is growing in proportion to the spreading speed of e-commerce. Thus, a policy for providing a safer security service for exchanging e-documents within e-commerce is necessary. XKMS (XML key management specification), one of XML's security specifications, defines the protocol for distributing and registering public keys for verifying digital signatures and enciphering e-documents of e-commerce applications with various and complicated functions. This paper presents an