Print This Article Post Comment Add To Favorites Email to Friends Ezine Ready

Pci Dss Compliance: An Overview

By: Chakri Devarakonda and Durga Prasad Adusumalli, AppLabs Home | Business | Careers-Employment


Introduction

The growth of online services to facilitate ease of use for customers to purchase goods has grown exponentially in recent years. In order to make the purchase process easier, customers generally pay for the services or goods by credit or debit card. However, improved efficiency and convenience for the consumer mean that crime has also become easier and more convenient.

Criminals have become more skillful, having discovered that there is a significant amount of money to be acquired with very little risk, and as such, credit card fraud and identity theft have become much more common in recent years. Network infrastructures that are utilized commercially necessitate absolute security due to the sensitive personal information which they contain.

Every company that accepts credit card payments, processes credit card transactions, stores credit card data, or in any other way touches personal or sensitive data associated with credit card payment processing is affected by PCI DSS.

What Is PCI DSS?

Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) is a set of security standards that has been created by the major credit card companies (American Express, Discover Financial Services, JCB, MasterCard Worldwide, and Visa International) to protect their customers from increasing identity theft and security breaches.
Who Must Comply with PCI DSS?

Virtually all businesses, regardless of their size, need to understand the scope of PCI DSS and how to implement network security that is compliant with PCI DSS guidelines. In doing so, they will avoid penalties or the possibility of having their merchant status revoked and potentially being banned from accepting or processing credit cards.

Any company that stores, processes, or transmits cardholder data must comply with PCI DSS. Primarily, merchants and service providers should be compliant to this standard. Merchants are the companies that accept credit cards in exchange for goods or services. A service provider is any company that processes, stores, or transmits cardholder data, including companies that provide services to merchants or other service providers. To comply with this standard, a merchant or service provider has to satisfy the requirements listed below.

Overview of PCI DSS Requirements

PCI DSS version 1.1 comprises six control objectives which in turn contain one or more requirements covering the ambit of IT security with a mix of technical and security controls. According to PCI DSS 1.1, the scope includes the cardholder data environment only if adequate network segmentation is in place. In most cases, this implies the use of dedicated firewalls and non-routable virtual local area networks (VLANs). If you do not have such controls in place, the scope of PCI compliance validation will cover your entire network. The list below elucidates the 12 PCI requirements:
â€Requirement 1: Install and maintain a firewall configuration to protect cardholder data
â€Requirement 2: Do not use vendor-supplied defaults for system passwords and other security parameters
â€Requirement 3: Protect stored cardholder data
â€Requirement 4: Encrypt transmission of cardholder data across open, public networks
â€Requirement 5: Use and regularly update anti-virus software
â€Requirement 6: Develop and maintain secure systems and applications
â€Requirement 7: Restrict access to cardholder data on a need-to-know basis
â€Requirement 8: Assign a unique ID to each person with computer access
â€Requirement 9: Restrict physical access to cardholder data
â€Requirement 10: Track and monitor all access to network resources and cardholder data
â€Requirement 11: Regularly test security systems and processes
â€Requirement 12: Maintain a policy that addresses information security

Compliance Process

Depending on the company’s merchant or service level provider, either an annual onsite PCI audit has to be conducted or a Self-Assessment Questionnaire (SAQ) has to be filled in to validate compliance. In addition to this, results of quarterly network perimeter scans (which have to be performed by an approved scanning vendor), evidence of internal vulnerability scans, and evidence of application and network penetration tests are to be shared with card brands
to prove to them that the company practices sound patch management and vulnerability management processes.

PCI classifies merchants and service providers based on the number of transactions that take place through their service.

Achieving PCI DSS Compliance

It is recommended that a proactive means for merchants and service providers to meet PCI DSS compliance includes having their network perimeter scanned by an Approved Scanning Vendor (ASV) every quarter. An ASV, at the request of a merchant or service provider, will obtain the required information, run a scan, and submit a scan report clearly highlighting compliance status, network vulnerabilities, and vulnerable services classified as per the scoring pattern and severities prescribed by PCI DSS. The compliance scan follows the steps highlighted below:
â€The merchant or service provider engages with an ASV to perform the PCI DSS scanning service;
â€The merchant provides the ASV with information about their network perimeter. Any special requirements like exclusion or justification of specific services are taken into account as part of this step;
â€The ASV scans the merchant’s network perimeter from a remote site using non-intrusive tests;
â€The ASV determines compliance based on the vulnerabilities found during the assessment. This is benchmarked against the scoring matrix provided by PCI DSS;
â€The ASV produces a report containing the PCI DSS status of each scanned network component with recommendations to address the vulnerabilities;
â€The ASV and the merchant shall review the vulnerabilities together and apply suggested fixes to mitigate any perceived risk and maintain compliance to PCI DSS.

Benefits of Compliance

â€By complying with PCI DSS, an organization has taken the appropriate steps to ensure that its customers and their data are secure;
â€One of the benefits of PCI DSS compliance is that the organization will not face a severe penalty if their services are breached. If the analysis after a security incident shows that the company was still compliant at the time of the incident, this will result in lenient treatment by the authorities;
â€More importantly, if your company is a Level 1 or Level 2 merchant, you may be eligible to receive part of the $20 million in financial incentives from Visa;
â€By obtaining PCI DSS compliance status, an organization can attract discounts on transaction costs from the credit card companies.



Article Source: http://www.eArticlesOnline.com

About the Author:
Compliance Jobs & Compliance Careers

Tags: , ,

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Careers-Employment Articles Via RSS!

Recent Related Articles From Careers-Employment

  • Is Remote Storage Of Credit Card Data A Valid Option?
    By: Andy Eliason | Mar 14th 2008
    The PCI DSS requires that anyone who stores, processes, or transmits sensitive credit card information must do everything they can to protect that information. This begs the question: Is remote storage of credit card data a valid option? Read

  • Keeping Up With The Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard
    By: Andy Eliason | Jun 8th 2008
    In recent history, consumer attention and paranoia have been focused very heavily on the procedures a merchant may or may not have implemented to protect their sensitive information. Keeping up with the PCI DSS is all about helping your customers feel confident conducting transactions with you. Read

  • Protecting Cardholder Data-the Third Step In Pci Compliance
    By: Andy Eliason | Mar 14th 2008
    The Payment Card Industry instituted the PCI DSS to help companies protect sensitive information. The third requirement is one of the most important and requires a more in depth study. Read

  • Strict Pci Dss Compliance Requires Constant Vigilance
    By: Andy Eliason | Jun 13th 2008
    A security breach is painful all around, yet many companies have yet to reach complete PCI compliance. Only by consistent testing, vigilance, and maintenance can a merchant keep their customers' sensitive data protected. Read

  • Credit Card Processing: The Contemporary Choice For Trade And Commerce
    By: Rosan Raaz | May 5th 2011
    Do you know what are online merchant services and internet credit card processing? To know in details you must read this article.
    Read

  • Credit Card Processing Gives You The Best E-commerce Solutions
    By: Rosan Raaz | May 5th 2011
    To enjoy an easy cash flow in your online business, make sure you have a merchant service account and also set up a credit card processing method. Consider it from a customer's view point, how comfortable and profitable it would be if there is such comfort in dealing with purchasing and selling products. Read

  • Dillards Credit Card Debt Details - The Best Weapon
    By: Cameronwhitee | Apr 7th 2011
    Dillards Credit Card debt details are the must so as to hold them in a conscientious manner. Using them do not bring you damage. They are not actually bad for they allow us to have convenience in purchasing things on sale devoid of having to carry money. Read

  • The Necessity Of Credit Card Data Encryption
    By: Andy Eliason | Feb 29th 2008
    The PCI DSS mandates that anyone who stores, processes, or transmits sensitive credit card data must be PCI compliant. Credit card data encryption is one of the most essential parts of reaching PCI compliance. Read

  • Credit Card Data Encryption: Getting Started
    By: Andy Eliason | Mar 21st 2008
    Credit card data encryption is one of the basics of PCI DSS compliance. Consumers need to know they can trust you. And the time will come when credit card data encryption will be one of the standards they use to measure your worth. Read

  • Why Choose Remote Storage Of Credit Card Data?
    By: Andy Eliason | Mar 7th 2008
    One of the best solutions to cover some of the loopholes that have a tendency to crop up in conventional security methods is remote storage of credit card data. Read


Copyright © 2005-2011 eArticlesOnline, LLC - All Rights Reserved
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy