Red Sift invites you to their event

Certificate Management for PCI DSS 4.0: What You Need to Know

About this event

PCI DSS 4.0 introduces new requirements to enhance cardholder data security, including maintaining an inventory of all cryptographic certificates (Requirement 4.2.1.1). In this webinar Red Sift’s Senior Director of Sales Engineering, Billy McDiarmid, will outline the steps needed to meet these requirements and ensure your organization is prepared to transition by March 31, 2025.

We'll cover:

  • Understanding PCI DSS compliance: Explore the latest updates to PCI DSS requirements and their implications for organizations.
  • Certificates: Learn how compliance standards have evolved and the role of certificates in meeting these mandates.
  • Email security as a key compliance driver: Learn how securing your email domain with solutions like DMARC, SPF, and DKIM contributes to PCI DSS compliance by protecting cardholder data from phishing and spoofing attacks.
  • Data protection: Discover how Red Sift solution monitors and secures sensitive information across your digital footprint, supporting critical compliance mandates.
  • Streamlining compliance efforts: See how automation and actionable insights from Red Sift simplify achieving and maintaining PCI DSS compliance.
  • Requirement 4.2.1: Certificates used to safeguard PAN during transmission over open, public networks are confirmed as valid and are not expired or revoked.

Reserve your spot now to learn how your organisation can best prepare for PCI DSS 4.0 changes and where Red Sift can help.

Hosted by

  • Team member
    T
    Billy McDiarmid Sr Director, Sales Engineering @ Red Sift

    Global Head of Solutions Engineering at Red Sift.

Red Sift

Creating a fundamentally safer internet through proactive security

Trusted by 1,200+ teams around the world, Red Sift makes it simple to deploy proactive security across email, web and PKI. Its cloud-based apps make it easy to embrace the protocols that keep the internet safe while protecting known protocol gaps, stopping configuration drift and using AI to scale.