Why payments is the perfect application for SD-WAN

The old days of retail transactions were a simpler time. Customers paid cash for their products and services — money you could hold in your hand. If customers didn’t have cash, well, then they didn’t get their goods or services.

Cash transactions morphed into electronic payments, wherein a point-of-sale (POS) terminal was connected point to point to a bank or lender by a dedicated telecom circuit, allowing retailers to accept payment cards. And then came the internet.

Since the advent of the internet, electronic payments are now digital payments — and these are not the same thing. Electronic payments were secure and supported by restrictive infrastructure.

Digital payments use open, common-source API and the internet, often Wi-Fi, to connect a POS terminal to banks and credit card vendors.

This has created areas of vulnerability for retailers everywhere, and those vulnerabilities don’t just exist in the POS terminal itself. Think about all the connected devices within a modern retail environment — tablets, smartphones, computers, smart speakers, wireless printers, security cameras, smart thermostats, augmented/virtual reality terminals for customer use, and so on.

Anything connected to the internet represents a risk, because it could be a backdoor for bad actors into a POS terminal and, therefore, into payment card data.

This means retailers must consider two main things: how they safely manage so many digital and connected devices within a retail environment, and how they can securely support their digital payments applications.

This is where SD-WAN comes in. Among other capabilities, software-defined wide-area networking (SD-WAN) gives retailers a more efficient way to manage business-critical applications like payment routing. It provides a centralised way to manage a network, reducing the complexity of an always-connected commerce environment.

With SD-WAN, retailers can securely connect, for example:

Online e-commerce gateways
Automatic Teller Machines (ATM)
POS terminals
Tablets for digital payments
Cash registers
Printers
Back-office computing
Fuel forecourt tank gauges
CCTV cameras
Guest Wi-Fi networks
It can provide a high level of detail for all of these connected devices, showing retailers what devices are consuming data at the communications layer. This helps retailers prioritise their data usage centrally to secure their payments and other business-critical systems.

SD-WAN can also protect sensitive card data. It can integrate best-in-class security protocols like next-generation stateful firewalls (NGFW) (including IP SEC VPN tunnels), anti-virus features, URL filtering and SSL packet inspection, increasing data and network security across retail environments.

At the end of the day, retailers should be focusing on providing an excellent experience for customers — not worrying about whether their connected devices or their payments terminals are opening the door to risk. With SD-WAN as the overlay on the broadband or Ethernet connection, and a resilient, proven payments network infrastructure as the underlay, retailers can securely and reliably manage payments transactions and gain peace of mind — for themselves and for their customers.

Find out more here: tnsi.com/

  • Issue by:Luke Frost
  • Web:http://
  • About Viv-Media|Free Add URL|Submit Press Release|Submit How To|SiteMap|Advertise with Us|Help|Contact Viv-Media |China Viv-Media
  • Copyright© 2010-2020 viv-media.com Corporation.
    Use of this web constitutes acceptance of Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. All rights reserved.  Poetry Online :Ancient Chinese Poetry