Editorial: Journal of Trust Management
暂无分享,去创建一个
© L p Dear reader Welcome! It’s been a long time coming, but here at last is the first tranche of papers and the official opening of the Journal of Trust Management, a SpringerOpen publication that is dedicated to the exposition and exploration of research and development in the fields of trust management and computational trust. This is a new journal, and still a relatively novel field, the presence of ‘trust’ and trust management tracks in just about all security conferences (and more than a few computer science, HCI, etc. conferences) notwithstanding. Indeed, the presence of such tracks illustrates two things about the field – it is recognized as being important, if not vital; and it is rather often misunderstood or misappropriated. Thus, a few lines are necessary about what this journal is exploring, and what trust management and computational trust are. Bear with me, or, if you already know and don’t need to read another exploration, feel free to skip to the end, where the papers in this issue are discussed, and the important people related to this journal are acknowledged. Firstly, we should think about what this journal is and is not. It’s not 100% a computer science journal. It’s not 100% a social science journal. And it’s not 100% a security journal. It is, however, a mixture of social, computer and security. This isn’t becauase we can’t define the field, it’s because the field touches on, and is touched by, a great many subject areas. We therefore welcome submissions from across the board of explorations of how people use trust, particularly in situations where they are supported by computational systems. We welcome submissions related to how trust is used in security applications, from Trust-Based Access Control to Trusted Computing and all points inbetween. We equally welcome explorations of trust from the computational point of view – how systems can use it, calculate (with) it, make decisions around and with it, and justify them. How, indeed, different trust models can be used in the many places where systems make decisions, whether or not humans are in that particular loop. We also welcome examinations and expositions of research related to how humans trust technology, in fields such as Human Computer Interaction and Computer Supported Collaborative Work. In other words, we are interested in the role of trust where technology and people interact, where technology makes decisions, and where uncertainty about actions exists – and that is a lot of touch points. The history of computational trust and trust management, though short (indeed, around 20 years), is exciting and sometimes tangled. Part of the problem is the close relationship trust has with security. Like any close relationship, it has its ups and downs and its fair share of misunderstandings, and we are just beginning to get to grips with the differences between trust and security, as well as their co-existence.
[1] Dieter Gollmann,et al. Why Trust is Bad for Security , 2006, Electron. Notes Theor. Comput. Sci..
[2] Dieter Gollmann,et al. From Access Control to Trust Management, and Back - A Petition , 2011, IFIPTM.