ABSTRACT
Focusing on methods that are used to implement strong user authentication for online-consumer identities, this article aims to distill a comprehensive view of strong user authentication by examining its concepts, implementation approaches, and challenges/additional concerns at the architectural level. It discusses effective solution approaches, overall architecture design, and emerging developments. In many web applications, it is desirable to have users log in by giving some unique login name and a password before accessing pages. There are many ways to implement this, each with different advantages and disadvantages. The considerations involved are complex enough that I'd guess that the majority of authentication systems in use on the web today have at least some fixable security weaknesses.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
TITLE PAGE
CERTIFICATION
DEDICATION
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
ABSTRACT
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
1.2STATE OF THE PROBLEM
1.3PURPOSE OF THE STUDY
1.4AIMS AND OBJECTIVES
1.5SCOPE OF STUDY
1.6LIMITATIONS OF STUDY
1.7ASSUMPTIONS
1.8DEFINITION OF TERMS
CHAPTER TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
CHAPTER THREE
3.1DESCRIPTION AND ANALYSIS OF EXISTING SYSTEM
3.2FACT FINDING METHOD USED
3.3ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE
3.4OBJECTIVES OF EXISTING SYSTEM
3.5INPUT, PROCESS AND OUTPUT ANALYSIS
3.6INFORMATION FLOW DIAGRAMS
3.7PROBLEMS OF THE EXISTING SYSTEM
3.8JUSTIFICATION OF THE NEW SYSTEM
CHAPTER FOUR
4.1DESIGN OF THE NEW SYSTEM
4.2INPUT SPECIFICATION AND DESIGN
4.3OUTPUT SPECIFICATION AND DESIGN
4.4FILE DESIGN
4.5PROCEDURE CHART
4.6SYSTEM FLOW CHART
4.7SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
5.1IMPLEMENTATION
5.2PROGRAM DESIGN
5.3PROGRAM FLOWCHART
5.4PSEUDO CODE
5.5SOURCE PROGRAM: TEST RUN
DOCUMENTATION
CHAPTER FIVE
7.1RECOMMENDATION
7.2CONCLUSION
BIBLIOGRAPHY