Journal of Information Technology in Construction
ITcon Vol. 11, pg. 89-102, http://www.itcon.org/2006/7
TOWARDS SECURE AND LEGAL E-TENDERING
submitted: | June 2005 | |
revised: | December 2005 | |
published: | April 2006 | |
editor(s): | Ruikar K | |
authors: | Martin Betts, Dean Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering, Queensland University of Technology, Australia email: m.betts@qut.edu.au Peter Black, Associate Lecturer School of Law, Queensland University of Technology, Australia email: p2.black@qut.edu.au Sharon Christensen, Professor and Deputy Director Information Security Institute, Queensland University of Technology, Australia email: s.christensen@qut.edu.au Ed Dawson, Professor and Director Information Security Institute, Queensland University of Technology, Australia email: e.dawson@qut.edu.au Rong Du, Ph.D. student Information Security Institute, Queensland University of Technology, Australia email: r.du@qut.edu.au William Duncan, Professor Queensland University of Technology, Australia email: w.duncan@qut.edu.au Ernest Foo, Lecturer Faculty of Information Technology, Queensland University of Technology, Australia email: e.foo@qut.edu.au Juan González Nieto, Research Fellow Information Security Institute, Queensland University of Technology, Australia email: juanma@qut.edu.au | |
summary: | Tendering processes are considered to be a suitable mechanism for governments to fairly assign contracts for construction projects and procurement. The demand for efficiencies to be created in the process has resulted in a significant number of governments implementing e-tendering systems. E-tendering systems generally involve the submission of tender offer documents to a secure system hosted by the government (principal). An electronic environment presents obvious opportunities for collusion between principal and certain tenderers, fraud by tenderers and a minefield of legal uncertainties for fuelling protracted disputes. Critical examination of the security and legal requirements for e-tendering systems does not appear in the current literature. This paper identifies key security and legal issues to be addressed in the design of e-tendering systems, which may be included in e-procurement software, and proposes a new e-tendering architecture, using distributed trusted third parties which may be suitable for secure large scale operations such as the construction industry. | |
keywords: | e-tendering, law, security, authentication, architectures. | |
full text: | (PDF file, 0.101 MB) | |
citation: | Betts M, Black P, Christensen S, Dawson E, Du R, Duncan W, Foo E and González J (2006). TOWARDS SECURE AND LEGAL E-TENDERING, ITcon Vol. 11, Special issue e-Commerce in construction, pg. 89-102, https://www.itcon.org/2006/7 |