Secure
Online Transactions
Have you been thinking
about setting up shop online? Taking your goods and services to the
Internet will increase your business potential in many ways.
Introduction Have you
been thinking about setting up shop online? Taking your goods and
services to the Internet will increase your business potential in
many ways. However, e-commerce requires a commitment to securing
transactional details, including credit card information from
customers. As e-commerce has grown, so have security threats.
Identity theft, data security breaches and phishing continue to top
the list of consumer complaints. All of these factors undermine
trust in digital commerce, and that is why it’s important for any
small business to take the necessary steps to reduce customer
concerns about shopping and banking online.
Payment gateways
In the spirit of the instant transactions that online shopping
enables, you will need to set up a payment gateway on your
e-commerce site that enables customers to pay by credit or debit
card. One of the most important decisions you'll face is to choose
the payment gateway. The gateway takes the submitted billing
information from your customer’s computer, through your secure
server, and on to your merchant account at a processing bank. The
gateway transaction is seamless and invisible to the customer, but
to those concerned about security, it is anything but invisible.
The payment gateway
provider you select should maintain their operations in
state-of-the-art datacenters and utilize the latest security
methods. They should also be fully compliant with major credit card
providers’ security initiatives, including the Visa Cardholder
Information Security Program (CISP), MasterCard Site Data Protection
(SDP), and Discover Information Security and Compliance (DISC).
Also, any payment gateway you work with must be certified as a PCI
Level 1 service provider. If you are considering using a
lesser-known provider, verify that the service is compliant with all
these initiatives. Otherwise you could end up paying higher fees,
having your account closed, or having your organization added to
credit card processing blacklists.
Deterring fraud
As discussed, it is critical that the payment gateway you choose
supports basic fraud detection and that all required authentication
measures are in place. For the most part, credit card fraud is
carried out by individuals that have only the credit card number —
and not the physical card itself. Here are two authentication
measures that payment gateway providers should have available:
- The Address
Verification System (AVS) authenticates a credit card
purchase based on the billing address. During the online
transaction, the customer is asked to supply their billing
address, which should match the address on the credit card bill.
The drawbacks to this kind of authentication is that it is very
easy to mistype an address, or for an updated address to not be
fully propagated within a credit card company.
- The Card
Verification Value (CVV), also known as Card Security Code
(CSC), is an authentication method based on the 3 or 4 digit
number on the back of VISA, MasterCard, or Discover cards, or on
the front of American Express cards. This number, called the CSC
(also known as a CCID or Credit Card ID), is used by merchants
so that they can secure "card not present" transactions, as are
those conducted over the Internet. Supplying this code in a
transaction is intended to verify that the customer has the card
in their physical possession.
Conclusion
When it comes to choosing a payment gateway provider, you need to
scrutinize their security measures because your business’ reputation
will depend on it. The provider should be effectively managing all
facets of security on an ongoing basis. The data should be secured
via a 128-bit Digital Certificate. The data center where the payment
gateway servers are housed requires ongoing requirements regarding
physical security as well as information security. The provider
should have firewall and intrusion detection systems installed at
the operating system and application layers, as well as have
database security and transaction security in place.
Of course, your own
business should adhere to the same stringent security guidelines you
expect of your gateway provider. At a time when identity theft and
fraud is on the rise, you need to ensure you have earned your
customers’ trust before they will conduct business with you online. |