SELGOct 6, 2022

Trust in Motion: Capturing Trust Ascendancy in Open-Source Projects using Hybrid AI

arXiv:2210.02656v21 citationsh-index: 11Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for dynamic trust modeling in open-source collaboration, though it appears incremental as it builds on prior static approaches.

The paper tackles the problem of understanding trust ascendancy, the dynamic process of influence-seeking and trust-building in open-source projects, by introducing a methodology to capture it from a dynamic view, with preliminary results showing effectiveness in analyzing a 2020 social engineering attack.

Open-source is frequently described as a driver for unprecedented communication and collaboration, and the process works best when projects support teamwork. Yet, open-source cooperation processes in no way protect project contributors from considerations of trust, power, and influence. Indeed, achieving the level of trust necessary to contribute to a project and thus influence its direction is a constant process of change, and developers take many different routes over many communication channels to achieve it. We refer to this process of influence-seeking and trust-building as trust ascendancy. This paper describes a methodology for understanding the notion of trust ascendancy and introduces the capabilities that are needed to localize trust ascendancy operations happening over open-source projects. Much of the prior work in understanding trust in open-source software development has focused on a static view of the problem using different forms of quantity measures. However, trust ascendancy is not static, but rather adapts to changes in the open-source ecosystem in response to new input. This paper is the first attempt to articulate and study these signals from a dynamic view of the problem. In that respect, we identify related work that may help illuminate research challenges, implementation tradeoffs, and complementary solutions. Our preliminary results show the effectiveness of our method at capturing the trust ascendancy developed by individuals involved in a well-documented 2020 social engineering attack. Our future plans highlight research challenges and encourage cross-disciplinary collaboration to create more automated, accurate, and efficient ways to model and then track trust ascendancy in open-source projects.

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