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I have a shopping cart flow like this:

  • Page 1. Choose Products
  • Page 2. Enter address, shipping, credit card details on a single page checkout.
  • Page 3. User confirms the order - but we want a final opportunity to upsell, so we must be able to change the amount charged. If the user abandons this page they should not be charged OR authorized anything, but we must be able to call them and convince them to order without having to ask for their number again.
  • Page 4. Receipt page

  • Repeat billing is a requirement for later, with variable amounts and schedules. (The user must be able to come back and change their schedule without entering CC number again).

Here's what I dont want to do :

  • Send the user to a third party page (because I want a single page checkout and retain branding)
  • Minimize PCI compliance requirements
  • Authorize payments and cancel them if the user doesn't confirm. This is asking for trouble on many levels!

Since I need a confirmation page I think I will need to use some kind of tokenization system such as offered by braintreepayments. You basically store the credit card number on their service and they give you back a token that represents that number. You can then make a charge against that card at any time for any amount. This certainly seems the most flexible solution.

I'm kind of going round in circles trying to figure out if this is the best solution or not :

  • I don't know if BrainTree is the only company that offers such a service, but I'm also not convinced its really necessary.
  • If I temporarily store the CC in session until the user confirms it I can still use pretty much any payment gateway. Therefore the question becomes 'does it matter if I store the CC in memory temporarily' and to what degree.

The 'purest' safest approach seems to be to redirect to braintree (or someone else that offers a similar gateway).

Edit (after assigning bounty):

I've concluded that I absolutely have to have a system where we only need to meet level A for PCI. Been studying PCI in more detail and these questionnaires are the relevant ones for card-not-present merchants (i.e. e-commerce).

SAQ A : (when CC numbers don't even touch our server). You still have to fill out this questionnaire if you're selling online, but it is pretty easy.

SAQ D : (where CC numbers touch our server EVEN IF WE DONT STORE THEM)

Take a look at these questionnaires reveals a huge delta between requirements. The PCI requirments are often misrepresented as being a simple list such as 'maintain a firewall', 'security policy', 'limit physical access' - but if you actually read questionnaire D you'll see it has order of magnitute more questions and requirments. For instance you have to answer whether or not your server is protected by a video camera, and what kind of data encryption you have on your server.

I'd really appreciate knowing what actual products or providers out there that will facilitate me doing what I want to do. If there really is only 1 or 2 companies out there that let me do this then I need to know.

I've got no relationship to Braintree except I've managed to get on their email marketing list. They're just the only company I've managed to find that does this. If you are running another company doing the same then by all means blow your own trumpet. PCI requirements are only going to become more stringent over time and anyone who has got this far reading my question probably already realizes that.

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    you've accepted less than a third of 235 questions asked. Might want to increase that a bit... Nov 23, 2009 at 0:36
  • i'm aware of that mitch, but appreciate the nudge. have tried a few times to go in and do it, but always end up having a hard time picking a single answer. i dont think they introduced the counter until about my 200th question though :-) then i was like 'oh *#&@' this is going to take some work even to get to 50%. Nov 23, 2009 at 1:18
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    Don't the requirements for avoiding "send[ing] the user to a third party page" mean that the CC# has to go through your server, which means you're up for SAQ D?
    – Stobor
    Dec 3, 2009 at 10:28
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    @stobor not if using a transparent redirect where the HTTP form is actually posted to the trusted third party's site (as if you were actually on a hosted page). they are then responsible for securely storing the card info and POSTing back to us with any additional non sensitive fields on that page - such as order items, username/password etc. Dec 3, 2009 at 22:04
  • @Simon: fair enough. To me that sounds like "sending the user to a third-party page", but if that process is okay for you, then yeah, many checkout operators offer some variant of that process.
    – Stobor
    Dec 3, 2009 at 23:51

4 Answers 4

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Yes, it matters if you store the CC number in memory. The moment the card number touches your network, you're in scope for PCI.

I don't work for Braintree but do work for a company that does what you need. You need a combination of tokenization and having the data hit an external site. We have a solution that works around the need to redirect to an external site. (I'm pretty proud of making that up, and people are going crazy for it.) It was made specifically to address everything you've mentioned. (Yes, you are not alone.)

I won't bias your search with self promotion as I'm sure there are lots of people out there doing it. (Plus I'm not here in an official marketing capacity and don't want to cause any problems for myself.)

Good luck.

Update: You can be a small company and still reach tier 1. It is all about volume, and if you do it right the first time there is nothing to change should you reach a higher tier. If you're not storing CC numbers (either by way of tokenization or other options), then that limits the applications and servers from what you need to do for PCI should you get to the point where a third party auditor needs to be involved. That is only one issue.

If the card number reaches your server at all, everything up to the point of that server is in scope for PCI. It is extremely silly that the auditors won't accept the fact that storing the CC number temporarily in memory should limit the scope of the server. But you're right; transparent redirect, second site redirect, or even a simple postback have no way of guaranteeing that data won't be stolen. PCI is about putting obstacles in place to make a data breach difficult, and then to be able to say that you've done all you could to prevent the data from being stolen. (My analogy is that PCI aligns the blame fingers to all point in the direction of the user rather than the people conducting business all the way up to the processor.)

The real big problem about PCI is that you can't anticipate how strict the rules will be enforced should you get to the point where an auditor needs to get involved. Every auditor interprets the PCI DSS requirements slightly differently, and even the people reviewing the ROC reports can suddenly decide they don't like what you're doing. It doesn't really matter what you're concerned about; what matters is if the PCI people are going to accept your ROC or if they are going to enforce some new interpretation of the rules.

I've worked with many auditors and many large companies going through PCI. The interpretation right now is that limiting scope means the card numbers can't touch your network. How that affects you is entirely dependent on your current or future volume.

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  • but is PCI really a big deal if ultimately we're not storing CC information on our servers. for a small/medium company don't we only have the self assessement survey to fill out? firewall, SSL, access policies. how hard can that be? the key thing is getting the data off our servers. it is a highly controlled environment and i'm not concerned at all about trojan software. someone could MORE easily inject javascript to steal the numbers than any server side software anyway - right. transparent redirect on some level can be a false sense of security Nov 24, 2009 at 4:32
  • ok turns out that each item on the PCI list has numerous sub items becoming unmanageable for most. if you touch the card information you must fill out form D pcisecuritystandards.org/docs/pci_saq_d.doc. you stil have to fill out form A even if you outsource payment processing, but there is a significant delta between A and D forms Nov 29, 2009 at 0:36
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    It should be pointed out that it doesn't matter what tier you are in the event of a breach. Auditors will investigate your business and see if you are PCI compliant or not, regardless of whatever SAQ or QSA audited ROC you possess. A Level 1 and Level 4 merchant have the same security requirements, they just differ in the level of annual auditing required. (Sorry a bit late to the game, just hoping to help others who see this question in the future)
    – Mike
    Apr 14, 2010 at 7:15
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You will have to fill out form D if you do not redirect the user to another site. It applies to all systems that have PANs, even if they aren't written to disk. If you're just getting started, I'd suggest going the redirect route so you can avoid that. PayPal's credit card offering is actually a reasonable choice for this. If nothing else, they're big and solid and unlikely to go anywhere.

Full PCI compliance is time consuming and expensive. I think it's generally best to defer that until a business has some revenue.

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    so what if we DONT. apart from the risk who comes after us? the fine is only $20/month right now. theres a deadline july next year. this is when we HAVE to have form A or D filled out by or risk getting cut off? ps. im absolutely not planning on doing this - just trying to better understand the big picture Dec 5, 2009 at 1:55
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    Think about what happens if they think you've been hacked and find out you weren't compliant. They can cut you off from credit card processing if they get upset enough. Likewise, if you're having chargeback problems they'll ask about PCI compliance. In general I don't think they care too much about very small merchants, but by not being compliant you're gambling with your business's survival.
    – edebill
    Dec 5, 2009 at 15:27
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+100

Here's the general rule of thumb: If you don't read, store, or process the PAN (CC#) and/or exp date, then you don't need PCI Compliance. If you even remotely touch that card number, then you need to undergo PCI Compliance.

Why not just make it easy and do PayPal ?

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  • When choosing a third party keep in mind that most service providers, including PayPal, won't give your data back to you if you want to leave. We (Braintree) started a credit card data portability standard to address the problem bit.ly/a2uEvm .
    – dan-manges
    Apr 27, 2010 at 16:22
  • This is incorrect, PCI Compliance is still required by a merchant even if you are outsourcing your card processing. However if you do not touch card data then that's good, as it makes your PCI compliance easier since a large part of your PCI compliance is just stating and proving that you do not touch card data! Mar 26, 2014 at 23:05
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If you want to minimize your PCI requirements, redirect to a Hosted Payment Page or use an iFrame solution. For more details, please see the Drupal PCI Compliance white paper, which I helped author.

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