CRDec 20, 2015

Developing a Trust Domain Taxonomy for Securely Sharing Information Among Others

arXiv:1512.06307v12 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for establishing trust guarantees in information sharing across organizations, but it appears incremental as it builds on existing concepts of trust domains without introducing a new paradigm.

This research tackled the problem of securely sharing information in collaborations by developing a taxonomy for trust domains with measurable trust characteristics, which was then applied to scenarios like Health Care Service and ConfiChair to demonstrate its utility.

In any given collaboration, information needs to flow from one participant to another. While participants may be interested in sharing information with one another, it is often necessary for them to establish the impact of sharing certain kinds of information. This is because certain information could have detrimental effects when it ends up in wrong hands. For this reason, any would-be participant in a collaboration may need to establish the guarantees that the collaboration provides, in terms of protecting sensitive information, before joining the collaboration as well as evaluating the impact of sharing a given piece of information with a given set of entities. The concept of a trust domains aims at managing trust-related issues in information sharing. It is essential for enabling efficient collaborations. Therefore, this research attempts to develop a taxonomy for trust domains with measurable trust characteristics, which provides security-enhanced, distributed containers for the next generation of composite electronic services for supporting collaboration and data exchange within and across multiple organisations. Then the developed taxonomy is applied to possible scenarios (e.g. Health Care Service Scenario and ConfiChair Scenario), in which the concept of trust domains could be useful.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes