Retailers fume over PCI security rules
Claim credit card firms shift burden to them
Computerworld - BOSTON — Several retailers this week bristled at having to comply with the Payment Card Industry (PCI) Data Security Standard, complaining that they carry an unfair burden in securing credit card data.
In interviews and speeches at the annual ERIexchange retail event here, executives also complained that implementing the standards is costly and could alienate customers.
The companies face heavy fines and increased transaction rates for noncompliance with the PCI standards.
Steve Methvin, director of store systems at Bi-Lo LLC, a Greenville, S.C.-based grocery chain of about 230 stores in the southeastern U.S., called on the credit card companies themselves to do more to make cards more secure — such as adding a PIN.
He said that the credit card companies have declined to take such steps in order to avoid complaints from customers.
“The responsibility for a safe environment is not mutual,” said Methvin, who sat on a panel at the show. “It seems like we’re being forced to provide an easy experience for Visa and MasterCard at our own expense. It’s frustrating. It seems like we’re investing money in areas” that customers don’t care about.
Bi-Lo has so far met all the deadlines for compliance with the rules, he noted.
The standards were created by five major credit card companies -- Visa International, MasterCard Worldwide, American Express Co., Discover Financial Services LLC and Tokyo-based JCB Co. -- to protect credit card data before, during and after transactions, PCI officials said.
Ongoing development of the standard is now managed by the PCI Security Standards Council, which was set up by the credit card companies last September. The standard includes a dozen security controls, including encryption, transaction logging and monitoring, along with authentication and access controls.
The standard went into effect in June 2005.
Robert Fort, director of IT at Virgin Entertainment Group Inc. in Los Angeles, said that while the controls imposed by PCI are sound, the organization should have worked more closely with the retail community to implement them.
“Much of the PCI standard [includes] good, solid network and security policies,” he said, though he added that “some of it is over the top” and can be confusing.
He also contended that the costs of meeting the requirements do nothing to boost a retail company’s bottom line. “There’s no direct return on investment,” he said. “It will not help us sell CDs.”
The cost of compliance will vary depending on a retailer’s particular network, its security procedures and its IT infrastructure, he said.
Glenn Kriczky, vice president of IS at Associated Wholesalers Inc., said that convincing store managers of the benefits of the PCI rules can be difficult. “It’s the customer we have to be concerned about,” he said.



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