CRApr 15

Where Trust Fails: Mapping Location-Data Provenance Risks in Europe

arXiv:2604.1366836.3h-index: 11
AI Analysis

For European policymakers and infrastructure architects, it provides a sector-neutral foundation for designing digital trust infrastructure that ensures location evidence is contestable under adversarial pressure.

This paper analyzes location-data provenance risks across multiple sectors in Europe, identifying a recurring asymmetry where location assertions are cheap to make but costly to contest. It introduces a risk taxonomy and positions proof-of-location mechanisms as a candidate capability layer for verifiable presence claims.

European digital sovereignty and security increasingly depends on whether high-impact decisions can be grounded in location evidence that remains credible under adversarial pressure. This paper frames a cross-sector analysis as a location-data provenance problem: not merely what a device or service reports as location, but whether there is contestable evidence about where and when an asserted event occurred, who or what produced the assertion, and under which audit and retention guarantees. There are observable patterns across democratic processes and the information environment, trade and origin-sensitive supply chains, finance and illicit shipping flows, critical infrastructure and mobility, and harms targeting individuals' private and social domains. In these patterns we see a recurring asymmetry in which locality, presence, routing, or jurisdiction can be asserted cheaply while institutions and affected parties face costly reconstruction when disputes arise. To make this challenge actionable, this paper introduces a compact risk taxonomy that decomposes provenance failures into integrity axes and recurring failure modes, and derives design expectations for next-generation digital trust infrastructure centered on contestability under dispute, while remaining privacy- and rights-compatible. It argues for treating location as a digital primitive that should be represented as evidence-bearing claims rather than self-asserted coordinates, and positions proof-of-location (PoL) mechanisms as a candidate capability layer for producing verifiable presence claims under explicit threat and privacy assumptions. The outcome is a sector-neutral foundation for future architectural work on a next-generation digital trust infrastructure for Europe.

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