A Survey on Trust-Based Web Service Provision Approaches

  • Authors:
  • Nicola Dragoni

  • Affiliations:
  • -

  • Venue:
  • DEPEND '10 Proceedings of the 2010 Third International Conference on Dependability
  • Year:
  • 2010

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Abstract

The basic tenet of Service-Oriented Computing (SOC) is the possibility of building distributed applications on the Web by using Web Services as fundamental building blocks. The proliferation of such services is considered the second wave of evolution in the Internet age, moving the Web from a collection of pages to a collections of services. Consensus is growing that this Web Service “revolution” won’t eventuate until we resolve trust-related issues. Indeed, the intrinsic openness of the SOC vision makes crucial to locate useful services and recognize them as trustworthy. In this paper we review the field of trust-based Web Service selection, providing a structured classification of current approaches and highlighting the main limitations of each class and of the overall field. As a result, we claim that a soft notion of trust lies behind such weaknesses and we advocate the need of a new approach based on a stronger (semantics-based) notion of trust.