Understanding PCI
Established in 2006, the Payment Card Index Digital Security Standard (or PCI DSS) was sponsored by the members of the PCI Security Standards Council. This council was founded to help the credit card industry self-regulate and manage the standards for consumer privacy that businesses would be beholden to. You certainly have at least one of the council’s members in your wallet right now: Visa, Mastercard, American Express, and Discover.
The standards that this council established apply to any and all businesses that accept payment cards from their customers. If you process or store payment information or process digital payments, PCI compliance is mandatory.
To remain compliant, any business that accepts payment cards needs to:
- Change passwords from system default
- Install sufficient network security tools (antivirus, firewalls, etc.) that will work to protect card data
- Encrypt transmission of card data across public networks
- Restrict the transmission of card and cardholder data to a “need to know” basis
- Assign user ID to all users with server or database access
- Make efforts to protect physical and digital access to card and cardholder data
- Monitor and maintain system security
- Test system security regularly
- Create written policies and procedures that address the importance of securing cardholder data
- Train staff on best practices of accepting payment cards
Any business, all businesses, each and every business of any kind that takes credit card payments needs to get these ten things done. Many businesses already accomplish these things as part of their typical routine… if you aren’t one of them, and accept card-based payments, your non-compliance could get you in serious trouble.
PCI and the Size of Your Business
The above checklist were the things that all businesses are responsible for, across the board. Based on what “level” of business you operate (according to the PCI Security Standards Council) there are other needs you must address. As the council defines them, there are four different levels you may fall into:
- Merchant Level #1 - A business that processes over six million payment card transactions per year.
- Merchant Level #2 - A business that processes between one million-to-six million payment card transactions per year.
- Merchant Level #3 - A business that processes between 20,000-to-one million e-commerce payment card transactions per year.
- Merchant Level #4 - A business that processes less than 20,000 e-commerce payment transactions, and fewer than one million overall payment card transactions per year.
As a level one breach will almost certainly have an impact to a larger number of consumers, the focus of the PCI regulatory body tends to be on these larger organizations. The means just aren’t there for every business to be checked constantly. However, that doesn’t mean that small businesses aren’t also facing severe risks. Here are some of the other requirements that businesses must fulfill, based on their Merchant Level:
Merchant Level #1
Considering the scale of these businesses and the reach that they have to consumers both online and in-store, these merchants have much greater responsibility. PCI compliance for Merchant Level 1 requires that merchants:
- Complete a yearly Report on Compliance (ROC) through a Qualified Security Assessor (QSA)
- Undergo a quarterly network scan by an Approved Security Vendor (ASV)
- Complete the Attestation of Compliance Form for PCI Council records
Merchant Level #2
Standards relax as the number of transactions decreases, so Merchant Level 2 dictates that these merchants:
- Perform a yearly Self-Assessment Questionnaire (SAQ)
- Allow an ASV to complete a quarterly network scan
- Complete the Attestation of Compliance Form for PCI Council records
Merchant Level #3
This is where most medium-sized businesses would classify, and also requires that merchants:
- Perform a SAQ
- Allow an ASV to complete a quarterly network scan
- Complete the Attestation of Compliance Form for PCI Council records
Merchant Level #4
This level applies to the vast majority of small businesses. Like the prior two merchant levels, this level requires that all merchants:
- Perform a SAQ
- Allow an ASV to complete a quarterly network scan
- Complete the Attestation of Compliance Form for PCI Council record
Noncompliant businesses can be reviewed, and are generally fined, watched more closely in the future, or even prohibited from accepting payment cards at all. Obviously, this isn’t something you want to happen to your business.
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