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Why Isn't Trust Transitive?

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TLDR
The notion of trust is distinguished from a number of other (transitive) notions with which it is frequently confused, and it is argued that “proofs” of the unintensional transitivity of trust typically involve unpalatable logical assumptions as well as undesirable consequences.
Abstract
One of the great strengths of public-key cryptography is its potential to allow the localization of trust. This potential is greatest when cryptography is present to guarantee data integrity rather than secrecy, and where there is no natural hierarchy of trust. Both these conditions are typically fulfilled in the commercial world, where CSCW requires sharing of data and resources across organizational boundaries. One property which trust is frequently assumed or “proved” to have is transitivity (if A trusts B and B trusts C then A trusts C) or some generalization of transitivity such as *-closure. We use the loose term unintensional transitivity of trust to refer to a situation where B can effectively put things into A's set of trust assumptions without A's explicit consent (or sometimes even awareness.) Any account of trust which allows such situations to arise clearly poses major obstacles to the effective confinement (localization) of trust. In this position paper, we argue against the need to accept unintensional transitivity of trust. We distinguish the notion of trust from a number of other (transitive) notions with which it is frequently confused, and argue that “proofs” of the unintensional transitivity of trust typically involve unpalatable logical assumptions as well as undesirable consequences.

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Citations
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Dissertation

On the Integrity and Trustworthiness of web produced data

TL;DR: Digitally signed documents provide an interesting solution to this problem, not only the validation of the document is automated, its integrity verifiable, but may be implemented in such way that the information contained in such documents can be directly dematerialized to different information systems without human intervention allowing cost reduction and leading to faster process workflows.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Trustworthiness and authentication in ubiquitous computing

TL;DR: Trust, trustworthiness, authentication and trustworthy authentication in ubiquitous and pervasive computing is discussed and the approach for implementing trustworthy authentication and related work are presented.

A non-transitive trust model for key distribution

TL;DR: This paper extends the conventional PKI and PGP models by deploying a recently introduced concept called trust*, a way of building on existing trust relationships using an electronic equivalent of real-world guarantees so as to avoid the need for transitive trust.
Book ChapterDOI

Auditable anonymous delegation

TL;DR: The contribution of this paper is an alternative mechanism for delegation, whereby users can share their credentials in such a way that it is difficult for the delegatee to re-use credentials of the delegator.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A logic of authentication

TL;DR: This paper describes the beliefs of trustworthy parties involved in authentication protocols and the evolution of these beliefs as a consequence of communication, and gives the results of the analysis of four published protocols.
Book

Firewalls and Internet Security: Repelling the Wily Hacker

TL;DR: The first edition made a number of predictions, explicitly or implicitly, about the growth of the Web and the patterns of Internet connectivity vastly increased, and warned of issues posed by home LANs, and about the problems caused by roaming laptops.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Reasoning about belief in cryptographic protocols

TL;DR: A mechanism is presented for reasoning about belief as a systematic way to understand the working of cryptographic protocols and places a strong emphasis on the separation between the content and the meaning of messages.
Book

Logics and languages

Book

Firewalls and Internet Security

TL;DR: The 2-amino-3-bromoanthraquinone which is isolated may be used for the manufacture of dyes and is at least as pure as that obtained from purified 2- aminoanthraquin one by the process of the prior art.