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PCI is an acronym that can refer to several standards in computing and finance. The most common usages are Peripheral Component Interconnect, PCI Express, and the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard.

Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI) is a former computer bus standard used to connect motherboard components with

PCI Express (PCIe) is the current bus standard that replaces PCI. It uses high-speed serial point-to-point links

Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) is a security framework established by major card brands

add-on
cards.
Introduced
in
the
1990s,
PCI
defined
a
parallel
bus
that
carried
data
between
the
CPU,
memory,
and
devices
such
as
network
and
sound
cards.
It
supported
bus
mastering
and
32-
or
64-bit
data
transfers.
PCI
was
largely
superseded
by
PCI
Express
and
is
now
primarily
of
historical
interest,
though
it
influenced
later
designs
and
terminology,
with
PCI-SIG
continuing
to
maintain
related
specifications.
and
supports
scalable
lane
configurations
(for
example,
x1,
x4,
x8,
and
x16).
PCIe
provides
higher
bandwidth
and
flexibility
across
multiple
generations,
while
preserving
software
compatibility.
It
is
widely
used
to
connect
graphics
cards,
solid-state
drives,
network
adapters,
and
other
peripherals
in
modern
desktop
and
server
systems.
to
protect
cardholder
data.
It
applies
to
organizations
that
store,
process,
or
transmit
such
information.
PCI
DSS
outlines
twelve
requirements
focused
on
network
security,
data
protection,
access
control,
monitoring,
and
maintaining
secure
systems.
Compliance
is
validated
through
self-assessment
or
independent
audits,
and
non-compliance
can
result
in
penalties
or
loss
of
ability
to
process
card
transactions.