@article{Kha_Rif_1997, title = {Weaving a Web of Trust}, author = {Rohit Khare and Adam Rifkin}, journal = {World Wide Web Journal}, number = 3, pages = {77--112}, volume = 2, year = 1997, abstract = {To date, "World Wide Web Security" has been publicly associated with debates over cryptographic technology, protocols, and public policy. This narrow focus can obscure the wider challenge of building trusted Web applications. Since the Web aims to be an information space that reflects not just human knowledge but also human relationships, it will soon reflect the full complexity of trust relationships among people, computers, and organizations. Within the computer security community, Trust Management has emerged as a new philosophy for protecting open, decentralized systems, in contrast to traditional tools for securing closed systems. Trust Management is an essential approach, because the Web crosses many trust boundaries that old-school computer security cannot even begin to handle. In this paper, we consider how this philosophy could be applied to the Web. We introduce the fundamental principles, principals, and policies of Trust Management, as well as Web-specific pragmatic issues. In so doing, we develop a taxonomy for how trust assertions can be specified, justified, and validated. We demonstrate the value of this framework by considering the trust questions faced by the designers of applications for secure document distribution, content filtering, electronic commerce, and downloadable-code systems. We conclude by sketching the limits to automatable Trust Management, demonstrating how trust on the Web will adapt to the trust rules of human communities and vice versa.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/23923a8eb29a357f9e75f52b029dd0dd6/dawinci}, keywords = {world management trust web wide} } @article{Sol_2007b, title = {'I've Got Nothing to Hide' and Other Misunderstandings of Privacy}, author = {Daniel J. Solove}, journal = {San Diego Law Review}, pages = {745 pp.}, volume = 44, year = 2007, url = {http://ssrn.com/paper=998565}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2ecf194247babbdde92b9c492fe5a9a73/dawinci}, keywords = {world protection privacy wide identity web} } @misc{MaySch_2007, title = {Useful Void: The Art of Forgetting in the Age of Ubiquitous Computing}, author = {Viktor Mayer-Schönberger}, institution = {Harvard University}, month = {April}, number = {RWP07-022}, school = {John F. Kennedy School of Government}, series = {Research Working Papers}, year = 2007, url = {http://ksgnotes1.harvard.edu/Research/wpaper.nsf/rwp/RWP07-022/$File/rwp_07_022_mayer-schoenberger.pdf}, abstract = {As humans we have the capacity to remember – and to forget. For millennia remembering was hard, and forgetting easy. By default, we would forget. Digital technology has inverted this. Today, with affordable storage, effortless retrieval and global access remembering has become the default, for us individually and for society as a whole. We store our digital photos irrespective of whether they are good or not - because even choosing which to throw away is too time-consuming, and keep different versions of the documents we work on, just in case we ever need to go back to an earlier one. Google saves every search query, and millions of video surveillance cameras retain our movements. In this article I analyze this shift and link it to technological innovation and information economics. Then I suggest why we may want to worry about the shift, and call for what I term data ecology. In contrast to others I do not call for comprehensive new laws or constitutional adjudication. Instead I propose a simple rule that reinstates the default of forgetting our societies have experienced for millennia, and I show how a combination of law and technology can achieve this shift.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2311ee303046ec65b6bcb503486499bc8/dawinci}, keywords = {data google web privacy wide world forgetting} }