The British Red
Cross (BRC) is considering working with other not-for-profit organisations
to meet the demands of new credit card data security requirements.
The charity is struggling with the PCI DSS standard, and has blamed banks for
not providing sufficient information to help compliance. It has had to reshuffle
IT priorities to accommodate the changes, said head of IT Miguel Fiallos.
“Even though we have to meet a deadline, the communication from the merchant
banks in relation to what is wanted is very poor,” he said. Fiallos also said he
is working with other charities to share the burden for parts of the process
such as testing.
The PCI DSS security standard affects any company transmitting, processing or
storing credit card information. Compliance is graded, with merchants divided
into four different levels based on the number of transactions they process
throughout the year.
“If the charity is accepting transactions over the phone or the internet, it
will typically need the card number, expiry date and sometimes the three-digit
code on the back of the card,” said Steve Wilson, head of policy compliance
management at Visa.
“Charities should not be keeping information after the transaction is
completed.”
BRC is undergoing tests under the Qualified Security Assessor programme.
Comments
Have your say on this article