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Payment Gateway is an e-commerce ASP service that
authorizes payments for e-businesses, online retailers,
bricks and clicks or traditional brick and mortar. It is
the equivalent of a physical POS(Point-of-sale) terminal
located in most retail outlets. Payment gateways encrypt
sensitive information, such as credit card numbers, to
ensure that information passes securely between the
customer and the merchant.
How payment gateways work A payment gateway facilitates
the transfer of information between a payment portal
(such as a website or IVR service) and the Front End
Processor or acquiring bank, quickly and securely.
When a customer orders a product from a Payment Gateway
enabled merchant, the payment gateway performs a variety
of tasks to process the transaction, completely
invisible to the customer. For example:
A customer places order on website by pressing the
'submit order' or equivalent button, or perhaps they
enter their card details on an IVR service.
If the order is via a website, the customer's web
browser encrypts the information sent between their
browser and the merchant's webserver. This is usually
done via SSL (Secure Socket Layer) encryption.
The merchant then forwards the transaction details
through to their payment gateway who hold the details of
their merchant account. This is often another SSL
encrypted connection to the payment server hosted by the
payment gateway.
The payment gateway who receives the transaction
information from the merchant then forwards the
information to the merchants acquiring bank.
The acquiring bank then forwards the transaction
information to the issuing bank (the bank that issued
the credit card to the customer) for authorization.
The card issuing bank receives the authorization
request, and sends a response back to the payment
gateway (via the acquiring bank) with a response code.
In addition to determining the fate of the payment, (i.e
Approved or Declined) the response code is used to
define the reason why the transaction failed (such as
insufficient funds, or bank link not available).
The payment gateway receives the response, and forwards
it on to the website (or whatever interface was used to
process the payment), where it is interpreted and a
relevant response then relayed back to the customer.
The entire process typically takes 3-4 seconds
At the end of the bank day (or settlement period) the
acquiring bank deposits the total of the approved funds
in to the Merchants nominated account. This could be an
account with the acquiring bank if the merchant does
their banking with the same bank, or a scrape account
with another bank.
PSMInfoline can do the payment gateway integration with
your shopping cart, e-business so that you can easily
process credit cards on your website or online store.
Our programmers are familiar with most popular payment
gateways and API. We can integrate your e-store with any
of the most popular payment gateways like
Google Checkout
Paypal
ANZ & NZ
ServeBase
Protx
Our pre-made scalable, portable scripts allow us to
deliver this service in any cart developed using updated
technologies.
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