PSPs establish technical connections with
acquiring banks and card networks, enabling merchants to accept different
payment methods without the need to partner with a particular bank. They fully manage
payment processing and external network relationships, making the merchant less dependent on
banking institutions. PSP can also offer
risk management services for card and bank based payments, transaction payment matching, reporting, fund
remittance and fraud protection. Some PSPs provide services to process other next generation methods (
payment systems) including cash payments, wallets,
prepaid cards or
vouchers, and even paper or
e-check processing. PSP fees are typically charged in one of two ways: as a percentage of each transaction, or as a fixed cost per transaction. Website builders such as
Wix, Ecwid, and Duda integrate with payment service providers to enable merchants to accept electronic payments through their websites. US-based
online payment service providers are supervised by the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (or
FinCEN), a bureau of the
United States Department of the Treasury that collects and analyzes information about financial transactions in order to combat
money laundering, terrorist financiers, and other
financial crimes. European payment service providers are supervised based on the European
Payment Services Directive. ==Security==