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Guide to PCI Compliance for E-Commerce Websites

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Compliance with the Payment Card Industry (PCI) Data Security Standards (DSS) is required for all merchants that collect, store, process, or transmit credit card data. The PCI Security Standards Council (SSC) designates specific compliance efforts that e-commerce merchants must follow, along with considerations and reporting documentation. However, the broad scope of DSS applicability and the varied forms leave many merchants needing a guide to PCI compliance for e-commerce websites.

 

A Comprehensive Guide to PCI Compliance for E-Commerce Websites

E-commerce merchants’ PCI compliance requires implementing and annually reporting on specific cybersecurity efforts and operational processes that protect cardholder data (CHD). However, the nature of merchants’ interactions with CHD—and, accordingly, their compliance requirements—vary significantly. Navigating these differences in PCI compliance for eCommerce sites poses a challenge to any merchant regardless. To help, this guide includes:

Expert knowledge of e-commerce merchants’ PCI compliance requirements cannot be communicated entirely within this guide alone, however. For more thorough advisory, contact a PCI SSC-approved cybersecurity and compliance vendor, such as RSI Security.

 

PCI DSS Requirements

Understanding the steps e-commerce merchants must take to remain compliant with the PCI DSS requires knowing the 12 Requirements (and their sub-requirements) that apply to all merchants. Each Requirement specifies a different cybersecurity measure or organizational process that merchants must follow to protect CHD.

Note that merchants must be familiar with the complete DSS, and they remain responsible for adhering to its entirety for e-commerce PCI compliance—even if payment processing is outsourced to a third party. Regardless of how compliance efforts are distributed between the involved parties, e-commerce merchants must explain all of them in their reporting documentation.

 

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PCI DSS: The 12 Requirements and Their Sub-Requirements

The PCI DSS is broken down into six goals, 12 Requirements, and numerous sub-requirements. The sub-requirements collated under each Requirement may number as many as 11.

The PCI DSS’s six goals and 12 Requirements are as follows:

Payment Processing Options

E-commerce merchants may adopt a payment platform that they develop themselves, but many outsource processing to a third-party vendor. The processing method a merchant utilizes determines their compliance reporting documentation. Compliance guidance released by the PCI SSC refers to these outsourcing vendors as payment services providers (PSPs).

The primary advantages outsourcing provides are minimized ongoing management and alleviated PCI DSS compliance efforts. Organizations may outsource some (i.e., shared management) or all (i.e., wholly outsourced) payment processing functionality.

However, while e-commerce merchants may outsource their payment processing functions and—by extension—some of their compliance efforts, their responsibilities do not fall to zero. Organizations must identify the specific PCI DSS Requirements and sub-requirements that a third party manages, alongside providing thorough explanations (where necessary) regarding the responsibilities retained internally.

 

Merchant-Managed Processing for E-Commerce

The PCI SSC identifies two payment processing categories that describe self-managed platforms for e-commerce merchants:

Merchants who retain management and maintenance responsibilities for payment processing platforms assume all PCI DSS compliance efforts related to them. Although an implemented platform may handle some aspects of PCI DSS adherence, organizations that manage it themselves must ensure that their configurations and activity conducted while using the solution remain compliant.

 

Shared Management Payment Processing

Organizations that outsource payment processing functionality to PSPs are generally provided with the following options:

 

Wholly Outsourced E-commerce Solutions

This processing method minimizes PCI DSS compliance burden as e-commerce merchants arrange all shopping functionality on a PSP-managed website or platform (e.g., product search, cart capability, checkout, account management). As the PSP manages all cybersecurity for the platform, they bear the overwhelming responsibility for PCI DSS compliance.

The PCI DSS still requires these e-commerce merchants to implement policies and procedures that outline safe CHD handling regardless of wholly outsourcing the shopping functionality provided to customers.

 

PSP Platform Validation—The PA-DSS

Though PSPs will assume a percentage of PCI compliance efforts (depending on the functionality utilized), e-commerce merchants must still validate platforms to ensure their use will adhere to the 12 Requirements. Regardless of what functionality is outsourced to a PSP,  e-commerce merchants remain responsible for their PCI DSS compliance—including whether or not an implemented PSP platform, application, or service adheres to PCI regulations.

E-commerce merchants should evaluate PSPs’ and their platforms’ compliance before implementation to ensure compliance. Processing solutions and services are subject to the Payment Application Data Security Standards (PA-DSS). The PCI SSC maintains a list of approved applications that have received PA-DSS validation. E-commerce merchants should note:

In addition to PCI DSS compliance and PA-DSS verification, organizations must ensure that their payment processing platforms adhere to all other compliance frameworks that apply to their industry or business activity. For example, the EU’s GDPR regards credit card data as personally identifiable information (PII). Therefore, e-commerce merchants that interact with EU citizens must ensure that CHD security also follows GDPR specifications.

 

PA-DSS Requirements

The PA-DSS applies to all PSPs who sell payment processing services or applications to merchants. The PA-DSS’s 14 Requirements are:

PCI DSS Reporting for E-Commerce Merchants

Broadly, eCommerce PCI compliance reporting mirrors that for all other merchants: conducting quarterly vulnerability scans and submitting documentation. The submitted documentation varies by yearly transaction volume and payment processing method, however.

The PCI SSC categorizes merchants into four Levels according to their annual payments processed across all payment channels. All merchants except for those with the highest transaction volumes must submit a Self-Assessment Questionnaire (SAQ). E-commerce merchants who process payments via the different outsourcing methods must determine which SAQ version applies to them.

 

The PCI DSS Levels

Per Visa, an SSC founding member, the PCI’s four Levels are as follows:

Note that Level categorization for eCommerce PCI Compliance is distinct from all other payment processing methods at Levels 3 and 4.

 

QSAs and ASVs

The PCI SSC approves third parties for completing quarterly scans and reporting documentation, much like the approved list of payment processing applications that have received PA-DSS validation. These third parties are designated as Qualified Security Assessors (QSAs) and Approved Scanning Vendors (ASVs).

QSAs and ASVs, such as RSI Security, must undergo rigorous recertification yearly to maintain their SSC-approved status.

Merchants completing their reporting documentation must partner with a QSA for ROCs and AOCs. While a merchant can fill out their SAQ internally, QSA guidance can help streamline the process and minimize effort substantially. An ASV must conduct the requisite quarterly vulnerability scans. However, note that for PCI DSS compliance, the “quarters” are not defined as the standard “Q1-4” but, instead, as 90 days since the previous vulnerability scan.

 

Self-Assessment Questionnaires (SAQs) for E-Commerce Merchants

The SSC provides numerous SAQ versions covering PCI compliance for eCommerce sites, with each pertaining to different processing methods. Depending on what and how much processing functionality a merchant outsources to a PSP, e-commerce merchants must choose from the following SAQ versions:

Completing a SAQ mostly consists of providing yes or no answers, with any additional information contained in compensating control worksheets (CCW).

 

E-Commerce Merchant Best Practices for PCI DSS Compliance

The SCC includes the following within its best practice guidance related to PCI compliance for eCommerce sites:

 

Expert eCommerce PCI Compliance

PCI compliance is a strenuous effort that all merchants who collect, store, process, or transmit credit card data must undertake annually. E-commerce merchants‘ cybersecurity implementations and reporting are further complicated by the variety of processing platforms and associated reporting documentation required.

This guide to PCI compliance for e-commerce websites should simplify merchants’ understanding of their required efforts. However, PCI compliance necessitates ongoing cybersecurity and CHD vigilance, and discerning the full extent of implementation and reporting requires DSS expertise. RSI is an SSC-approved QSA and ASV with over a decade of experience related to PCI DSS compliance.

Contact RSI Security today to learn how you can streamline and simplify your eCommerce PCI compliance even further!

 


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