STOC '97 Proceedings of the twenty-ninth annual ACM symposium on Theory of computing
Summary cache: a scalable wide-area Web cache sharing protocol
Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM '98 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communication
Space/time trade-offs in hash coding with allowable errors
Communications of the ACM
Managing trust in a peer-2-peer information system
Proceedings of the tenth international conference on Information and knowledge management
A reputation-based approach for choosing reliable resources in peer-to-peer networks
Proceedings of the 9th ACM conference on Computer and communications security
Chord: a scalable peer-to-peer lookup protocol for internet applications
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON)
IPTPS '01 Revised Papers from the First International Workshop on Peer-to-Peer Systems
Quality driven web services composition
WWW '03 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on World Wide Web
The Eigentrust algorithm for reputation management in P2P networks
WWW '03 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on World Wide Web
A reputation system for peer-to-peer networks
NOSSDAV '03 Proceedings of the 13th international workshop on Network and operating systems support for digital audio and video
Collaborative Reputation Mechanisms in Electronic Marketplaces
HICSS '99 Proceedings of the Thirty-second Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences-Volume 8 - Volume 8
PeerTrust: Supporting Reputation-Based Trust for Peer-to-Peer Electronic Communities
IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering
Reputation = f(User Ranking, Compliance, Verity)
ICWS '04 Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Web Services
Resilient Trust Management for Web Service Integration
ICWS '05 Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Web Services
Application-Aware Reliability and Security: The Trusted ILLIAC Approach
NCA '06 Proceedings of the Fifth IEEE International Symposium on Network Computing and Applications
Bloom histogram: path selectivity estimation for XML data with updates
VLDB '04 Proceedings of the Thirtieth international conference on Very large data bases - Volume 30
Tapestry: a resilient global-scale overlay for service deployment
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
Start Trusting Strangers? Bootstrapping and Prediction of Trust
WISE '09 Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Web Information Systems Engineering
Modeling and mining of dynamic trust in complex service-oriented systems
Information Systems
The pervasive trust foundation for security in next generation networks
Proceedings of the 2010 workshop on New security paradigms
Trust as a service: a framework for trust management in cloud environments
WISE'11 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Web information system engineering
Credibility-Based trust management for services in cloud environments
ICSOC'11 Proceedings of the 9th international conference on Service-Oriented Computing
LFTM, linguistic fuzzy trust mechanism for distributed networks
Concurrency and Computation: Practice & Experience
Trust management of services in cloud environments: Obstacles and solutions
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
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Many reputation management systems have been developed under the assumption that each entity in the system will use a variant of the same scoring function. Much of the previous work in reputation management has focused on providing robustness and improving performance for a given reputation scheme. In this paper, we present a reputation-based trust management framework that supports the synthesis of trust-related feedback from many different entities while also providing each entity with the flexibility to apply different scoring functions over the same feedback data for customized trust evaluations. We also propose a novel scheme to cache trust values based on recent client activity. To evaluate our approach, we implemented our trust management service and tested it on a realistic application scenario in both LAN and WAN distributed environments. Our results indicate that our trust management service can effectively support multiple scoring functions with low overhead and high availability.