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Guest Columnist David Taylor argues that virtualization technology has been around for a while, although interest in it has largely been confined to the seriously geeky among us. The primary benefits of virtualization are flexibility and scalability. It allows a company to “pool” computer hardware and create new applications, new servers, new networks, new data storage at the touch of a button and, in the process, reduce costs and administrative overhead. Read more. |
March 28th, 2008 at 8:30 am
I’m not sure where this odd interpretation is coming from. Any assessor that has had to deal with a sizeable Level 1 has likely come into contact with virtualization in the form of an LPAR. There is no reason that the same kind of technology could not be used in distributed systems. We regularly see and approve this technology for use in the PCI environment.
To all the readers of this post, you CAN use virtualization and be PCI compliant!
March 28th, 2008 at 8:51 am
Based on over 75 hours of interviews with merchants, assessors, banks, processors, I can safely say that the interpretation of server virtualization (specifically 2.2.1, which says “only 1 primary function per server”) is not consistent across the community of companies involved in PCI. I happen to agree that the notion that Virtualization runs contrary to 2.2.1 is “odd” - and that is exactly the point of bringing up the topic. We recently did a Webcast on the topic, and the feedback from the participants was that the webcast helped clear up a very murky area of PCI. If you want to discuss it further, send me an email. Thx, Dave Taylor