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Trust Management [electronic resource] : Third International Conference, iTrust 2005, Paris, France, May 23-26, 2005, Proceedings / edited by Peter Herrmann, Valerie Issarny, Simon Shiu.

Contributor(s): Herrmann, Peter [editor.] | Issarny, Valerie [editor.] | Shiu, Simon [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Information Systems and Applications, incl. Internet/Web, and HCI: 3477Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2005Edition: 1st ed. 2005.Description: XII, 428 p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783540320401.Subject(s): Application software | Information storage and retrieval systems | Computer networks  | Computers and civilization | Electronic data processing -- Management | Computer and Information Systems Applications | Information Storage and Retrieval | Computer Communication Networks | Computers and Society | IT OperationsAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 005.3 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Third International Conference on Trust Management -- Foraging for Trust: Exploring Rationality and the Stag Hunt Game -- Trust, Untrust, Distrust and Mistrust - An Exploration of the Dark(er) Side -- Security and Trust in the Italian Legal Digital Signature Framework -- Specifying Legal Risk Scenarios Using the CORAS Threat Modelling Language -- On Deciding to Trust -- Trust Management Survey -- Can We Manage Trust? -- Operational Models for Reputation Servers -- A Representation Model of Trust Relationships with Delegation Extensions -- Affect and Trust -- Reinventing Forgiveness: A Formal Investigation of Moral Facilitation -- Modeling Social and Individual Trust in Requirements Engineering Methodologies -- Towards a Generic Trust Model - Comparison of Various Trust Update Algorithms -- A Probabilistic Trust Model for Handling Inaccurate Reputation Sources -- Trust as a Key to Improving Recommendation Systems -- Alleviating the Sparsity Problem of Collaborative Filtering Using Trust Inferences -- Experience-Based Trust: Enabling Effective Resource Selection in a Grid Environment -- Interactive Credential Negotiation for Stateful Business Processes -- An Evidence Based Architecture for Efficient, Attack-Resistant Computational Trust Dissemination in Peer-to-Peer Networks -- Towards an Evaluation Methodology for Computational Trust Systems -- Trusted Computing: Strengths, Weaknesses and Further Opportunities for Enhancing Privacy -- Trust Transfer: Encouraging Self-recommendations Without Sybil Attack -- Privacy-Preserving Search and Updates for Outsourced Tree-Structured Data on Untrusted Servers -- Persistent and Dynamic Trust: Analysis and the Related Impact of Trusted Platforms -- Risk Models for Trust-Based Access Control(TBAC) -- Combining Trust and Risk to Reduce the Cost ofAttacks -- IWTrust: Improving User Trust in Answers from the Web -- Trust Record: High-Level Assurance and Compliance -- Implementation of the SECURE Trust Engine -- The CORAS Tool for Security Risk Analysis -- Towards a Grid Platform Enabling Dynamic Virtual Organisations for Business Applications -- Multimedia Copyright Protection Platform Demonstrator -- ST-Tool: A CASE Tool for Modeling and Analyzing Trust Requirements -- The VoteSecureTM Secure Internet Voting System.
In: Springer Nature eBookSummary: This volume constitutes the proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Trust Management, held in Paris, France, during 23-26 May 2005. The conf- ence follows successful International Conferences in Crete in 2003 and Oxford in 2004. All conferences were organized by iTrust, which is a working group funded as a thematic network by the Future and Emerging Technologies (FET) unit of the Information Society Technologies (IST) program of the European Union. The purpose of the iTrust working group is to provide a forum for cro- disciplinary investigation of the applications of trust as a means of increasing security, building con?dence and facilitating collaboration in dynamic open s- tems. The notion of trust has been studied independently by di?erent academic disciplines, which has helped us to identify and understand di?erent aspects of trust. Theaimofthisconferencewastoprovideacommonforum,bringingtogether researchers from di?erent academic branches, such as the technology-oriented disciplines, law, social sciences and philosophy, in order to develop a deeper and more fundamental understanding of the issues and challenges in the area of trust management in dynamic open systems. The response to this conference was excellent; from the 71 papers submitted to the conference, we selected 21 full papers and 4 short papers for presentation. The program also included two keynote addresses, given by Steve Marsh from National Research Centre Canada, Institute for Information Technology, and Steve Kimbrough from the University of Pennsylvania; an industrial panel; 7 technology demonstrations; and a full day of tutorials.
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Third International Conference on Trust Management -- Foraging for Trust: Exploring Rationality and the Stag Hunt Game -- Trust, Untrust, Distrust and Mistrust - An Exploration of the Dark(er) Side -- Security and Trust in the Italian Legal Digital Signature Framework -- Specifying Legal Risk Scenarios Using the CORAS Threat Modelling Language -- On Deciding to Trust -- Trust Management Survey -- Can We Manage Trust? -- Operational Models for Reputation Servers -- A Representation Model of Trust Relationships with Delegation Extensions -- Affect and Trust -- Reinventing Forgiveness: A Formal Investigation of Moral Facilitation -- Modeling Social and Individual Trust in Requirements Engineering Methodologies -- Towards a Generic Trust Model - Comparison of Various Trust Update Algorithms -- A Probabilistic Trust Model for Handling Inaccurate Reputation Sources -- Trust as a Key to Improving Recommendation Systems -- Alleviating the Sparsity Problem of Collaborative Filtering Using Trust Inferences -- Experience-Based Trust: Enabling Effective Resource Selection in a Grid Environment -- Interactive Credential Negotiation for Stateful Business Processes -- An Evidence Based Architecture for Efficient, Attack-Resistant Computational Trust Dissemination in Peer-to-Peer Networks -- Towards an Evaluation Methodology for Computational Trust Systems -- Trusted Computing: Strengths, Weaknesses and Further Opportunities for Enhancing Privacy -- Trust Transfer: Encouraging Self-recommendations Without Sybil Attack -- Privacy-Preserving Search and Updates for Outsourced Tree-Structured Data on Untrusted Servers -- Persistent and Dynamic Trust: Analysis and the Related Impact of Trusted Platforms -- Risk Models for Trust-Based Access Control(TBAC) -- Combining Trust and Risk to Reduce the Cost ofAttacks -- IWTrust: Improving User Trust in Answers from the Web -- Trust Record: High-Level Assurance and Compliance -- Implementation of the SECURE Trust Engine -- The CORAS Tool for Security Risk Analysis -- Towards a Grid Platform Enabling Dynamic Virtual Organisations for Business Applications -- Multimedia Copyright Protection Platform Demonstrator -- ST-Tool: A CASE Tool for Modeling and Analyzing Trust Requirements -- The VoteSecureTM Secure Internet Voting System.

This volume constitutes the proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Trust Management, held in Paris, France, during 23-26 May 2005. The conf- ence follows successful International Conferences in Crete in 2003 and Oxford in 2004. All conferences were organized by iTrust, which is a working group funded as a thematic network by the Future and Emerging Technologies (FET) unit of the Information Society Technologies (IST) program of the European Union. The purpose of the iTrust working group is to provide a forum for cro- disciplinary investigation of the applications of trust as a means of increasing security, building con?dence and facilitating collaboration in dynamic open s- tems. The notion of trust has been studied independently by di?erent academic disciplines, which has helped us to identify and understand di?erent aspects of trust. Theaimofthisconferencewastoprovideacommonforum,bringingtogether researchers from di?erent academic branches, such as the technology-oriented disciplines, law, social sciences and philosophy, in order to develop a deeper and more fundamental understanding of the issues and challenges in the area of trust management in dynamic open systems. The response to this conference was excellent; from the 71 papers submitted to the conference, we selected 21 full papers and 4 short papers for presentation. The program also included two keynote addresses, given by Steve Marsh from National Research Centre Canada, Institute for Information Technology, and Steve Kimbrough from the University of Pennsylvania; an industrial panel; 7 technology demonstrations; and a full day of tutorials.

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