Simulated social control for secure Internet commerce
NSPW '96 Proceedings of the 1996 workshop on New security paradigms
Community-based service location
Communications of the ACM
ACM SIGAda Ada Letters
ACM Transactions on Information and System Security (TISSEC)
IEEE Internet Computing
Principles of Trust for MAS: Cognitive Anatomy, Social Importance, and Quantification
ICMAS '98 Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Multi Agent Systems
Introduction: Service-oriented computing
Communications of the ACM - Service-oriented computing
Trust-X: A Peer-to-Peer Framework for Trust Establishment
IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering
Trust Negotiations: Concepts, Systems, and Languages
Computing in Science and Engineering
Collaborative Automated Trust Negotiation in Peer-to-Peer Systems
P2P '04 Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Peer-to-Peer Computing
Beyond concern: a privacy-trust-behavioral intention model of electronic commerce
Information and Management
IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering
Access control enforcement for conversation-based web services
Proceedings of the 15th international conference on World Wide Web
An integrated trust and reputation model for open multi-agent systems
Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems
A Negotiation Scheme for Access Rights Establishment in Autonomic Communication
Journal of Network and Systems Management
Trust-based service provider selection in open environments
Proceedings of the 2007 ACM symposium on Applied computing
A Review on Trust and Reputation for Web Service Selection
ICDCSW '07 Proceedings of the 27th International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems Workshops
A formal Framework for Trust management of Service-oriented Systems
SOCA '07 Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Service-Oriented Computing and Applications
A Trust Based Methodology for Web Service Selection
ICSC '07 Proceedings of the International Conference on Semantic Computing
Matching Policies with Security Claims of Mobile Applications
ARES '08 Proceedings of the 2008 Third International Conference on Availability, Reliability and Security
Reputation Bootstrapping for Trust Establishment among Web Services
IEEE Internet Computing
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
Trust based recommender system for the semantic web
IJCAI'07 Proceedings of the 20th international joint conference on Artifical intelligence
Towards Contract-based Testing of Web Services
Electronic Notes in Theoretical Computer Science (ENTCS)
A fuzzy approach to a belief-based trust computation
AAMAS'02 Proceedings of the 2002 international conference on Trust, reputation, and security: theories and practice
IRS-III: a broker for semantic web services based applications
ISWC'06 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on The Semantic Web
Trust negotiation for semantic web services
SWSWPC'04 Proceedings of the First international conference on Semantic Web Services and Web Process Composition
Engineering self-organizing referral networks for trustworthy service selection
IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, Part A: Systems and Humans
Security-by-contract: toward a semantics for digital signatures on mobile code
EuroPKI'07 Proceedings of the 4th European conference on Public Key Infrastructure: theory and practice
Where Are All the Agents? On the Gap between Theory and Practice of Agent-Based Referral Networks
PRIMA '09 Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Principles of Practice in Multi-Agent Systems
A taxonomy of trust oriented approaches for services computing
Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Information Integration and Web-based Applications and Services
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The Service-Oriented Computing (SOC) paradigm envisions a large, open and dynamic computing environment where anyone can publish his own services, for instance on the Web by using Web services (WS) as fundamental building blocks. In order to realize this vision, several challenges must still be addressed. In particular, consensus is growing that this “service revolution” won’t eventuate until we resolve trust-related issues. Indeed, the intrinsic openness and dynamism of the SOC vision makes crucial to locate useful services and recognize them as trustworthy. In this paper we critically review the field of trust-based Web service selection, proposing a structured classification of the current approaches and highlighting their main weaknesses. According to this analysis, we claim that a “soft” notion of trust lies behind such weaknesses. Finally, we address this limitation roughing out a “hard” trust based framework for WS publishing, selection and monitoring, namely Trust-By-Contract. We claim that the Trust-By-Contract rationale can be considered a first step toward trustworthy Web services.