PCI / CISP Compliance |
![]() |
|
Background : Core Elements : Non-Compliance Risks : Warning Signs : Ongoing Changes : Next Steps : Further Reading : Self-Assessment |
||
a. The rules are changing and we will always need ways to improve security efforts b. Some of the rules were written for Department Stores and companies with full-scale I.T. departments are not practical to implement. Attempting to achieve the goals that are attainable is appropriate; however, achievement of all may be challenging for some. In the documentation, it appears that there is some room for what is termed “compensating controls”. For example, if there are no offices that can be locked, one would want to install a webcam that streams video out to the web to “watch” the unprotected server at all times. c. Point of Sale applications (while helpful) typically have a level with which they have been audited and deemed “compliant”. Check with your dealer or I.T. personnel to make sure you have a version that encrypts and has been audited successfully. Updates to Point of Sale applications and their “approved” status is continually being adjusted. As indicated above, there is a Visa list from February. The “validated” applications list is a work in progress and will change over time. There is one case where a Visa-validated application today is actually invalid due to American Express split-dial transactions, which are unencrypted, thus making this supposedly “valid” version invalid, which will be updated and shown in a later version of Standards. d. Even the Payment Card Industry (PCI) publishes “PABP” (Payment Applications Best Practices). If there was a solution, they would publish a “standard” for everyone to follow, not a “best practice”.
Payment Applications
Visa
has developed "Payment Application Best Practices" to assist software
vendors create secure payment applications that help ensure merchant compliance
with the PCI Data Security Standard.
On this page
·
Validation procedures and
documentation
Best practices goal
Payment
applications must not retain full magnetic stripe data or CVV2 data and must
support a merchant's and service provider’s ability to comply with the PCI Data
Security Standard. Acquirers are responsible for ensuring that their merchants
and service providers confirm the security of their payment applications using
the "Payment Application Best Practices".
Visa recommendations
Visa
has been actively working to educate software vendors and to provide best practices
for secure payment applications.
·
Software vendors should validate their
payment applications against recommendations outlined in Visa's "Payment
Application Best Practices". Visa makes no endorsement of applications or
products and disclaims all warranties. Members remain responsible for
performing their own due diligence to ensure CISP compliance of their merchants
and service providers.
·
Acquirers should share the "Payment
Application Best Practices" with both card-present and online merchants,
and encourage them to use it to evaluate their payment applications. Acquirers
and merchants can also encourage software vendors to participate in the
validation effort.
·
Acquirers should refer to the Validated
Payment Applications list and encourage their merchants to use validated
applications.
To
locate a validated payment application, download the Validated Payment
Applications from the regularly updated feeds.
Validation procedures
and documentation
Software
vendors seeking to validate their payment applications must engage a QPASC
qualified by Visa to perform payment application assessments. Compliance
validation takes place at software vendor's expense.
·
The Annual On-Site Security
Assessment must be completed according to the Payment Application Best
Practices document. This document is also to be used as the template for
the Report on Validation to be submitted to Visa.
·
The Confirmation of Report
Accuracy (for Payment Application Companies) must be completed by all payment
application vendors validating compliance and their assessor and submitted to
Visa.
Download Payment Application
Best Practices (DOC).
Download Confirmation of Report
Accuracy (Payment Application Companies) (DOC,
123k).
For more information
To
learn more about the Visa CISP or begin an audit, contact Visa via email at AskVisaUSA@Visa.com.
Pasted
from <http://usa.visa.com/merchants/risk_management/cisp_payment_applications.html>
Being that it is an ongoing process, making a business “CISP compliant” is a moving target. No one can “make” you CISP compliant - unless they are part of an ongoing, permanently changing solution. Anyone who tells you otherwise would be lying if they suggested they could, unless they are you, the business owner/merchant (the only one capable of overseeing the process end-to-end).
|