DocumentCode
1998730
Title
Academic Panel: "Can Self-Managed Systems Be Trusted?"
Author
de Lemos, Rogerio ; McCann, Julie A. ; Rana, Omar F. ; Wombacher, Andreas ; Huebscher, Marksu
Author_Institution
University of Kent
fYear
2005
fDate
22-26 Aug. 2005
Firstpage
1171
Lastpage
1175
Abstract
Trust can be defined as to have confidence or faith in; a form of reliance or certainty based on past experience; to allow without fear; believe; hope: expect and wish; and extend credit to. The issue of trust in computing has always been a hot topic, especially notable with the proliferation of services over the Internet, which has brought the issue of trust and security right into the ordinary home. Autonomic computing brings its own complexity to this. With systems that self-manage, the internal decision making process is less transparent and the ‘intelligence’ possibly evolving and becoming less tractable. Such systems may be used from anything from environment monitoring to looking after Granny in the home and thus the issue of trust is imperative. To this end, we have organised this panel to examine some of the key aspects of trust. The first section discusses the issues of self-management when applied across organizational boundaries. The second section explores predictability in self-managed systems. The third part examines how trust is manifest in electronic service communities. The final discussion demonstrates how trust can be integrated into an autonomic system as the core intelligence with which to base adaptivity choices upon.
Keywords
Computer science; Educational institutions; Home computing; Information systems; Jamming; Laboratories; Quality of service; Security; Service oriented architecture; Web and internet services;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Database and Expert Systems Applications, 2005. Proceedings. Sixteenth International Workshop on
ISSN
1529-4188
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2424-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/DEXA.2005.37
Filename
1508267
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