DocumentCode :
1142554
Title :
The pudding of trust [intelligent systems]
Author :
Bhargava, Bharat ; Lilien, L. ; Rosenthal, Amir ; Winslett, M. ; Sloman, M. ; Dillon, Tharam S. ; Chang, En-Jui ; Hussain, Farookh Khadeer ; Nejdl, Wolfgang ; Olmedilla, D. ; Kashyap, V.
Author_Institution :
University of Karlsruhe
Volume :
19
Issue :
5
fYear :
2004
Firstpage :
74
Lastpage :
88
Abstract :
Trust - "reliance on the integrity, ability, or character of a person or thing" - is pervasive in social systems. We constantly apply it in interactions between people, organizations, animals, and even artifacts. We use it instinctively and implicitly in closed and static systems, or consciously and explicitly in open or dynamic systems. An epitome for the former case is a small village, where everybody knows everybody, and the villagers instinctively use their knowledge or stereotypes to trust or distrust their neighbors. A big city exemplifies the latter case, where people use explicit rules of behavior in diverse trust relationships. We already use trust in computing systems extensively, although usually subconsciously. The challenge for exploiting trust in computing lies in extending the use of trust-based solutions, first to artificial entities such as software agents or subsystems, then to human users\´ subconscious choices.
Keywords :
data integrity; open systems; security of data; software agents; ubiquitous computing; dynamic systems; open systems; pervasive computing; software agents; static systems; trust-based solutions; Concrete; Data privacy; Data security; Information management; Intelligent systems; Internet; Peer to peer computing; Risk management; Scalability; Solids; peer-to-peer networks; pervasive systems; trust; trust management; trust ontology;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Intelligent Systems, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1541-1672
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MIS.2004.52
Filename :
1347072
Link To Document :
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