Jump to content

Trust: Difference between revisions

From ICANNWiki
Jessica (talk | contribs)
Created page with "'''Trust'''is the belief and process leading to that belief in the reliability, truth, ability, or strength of someone or something. Ensuring trust is a key issue in maintaini..."
 
Jessica (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Trust'''is the belief and process leading to that belief in the reliability, truth, ability, or strength of someone or something. Ensuring trust is a key issue in maintaining the value of the Internet, and several organizations are devoted to meeting this objective, including [[ICANN]] and the [[Internet Society]].<ref>[https://www.internetsociety.org/issues/trust/ On Trust, Internet Society]</ref>
'''Trust''' is the belief and process leading to that belief in the reliability, truth, ability, or strength of someone or something. Ensuring trust is a key issue in maintaining the value of the Internet, and several organizations are devoted to meeting this objective, including [[ICANN]] and the [[Internet Society]].<ref>[https://www.internetsociety.org/issues/trust/ On Trust, Internet Society]</ref>


==Trusted Notifier==
==Trusted Notifier==

Revision as of 15:56, 27 October 2021

Trust is the belief and process leading to that belief in the reliability, truth, ability, or strength of someone or something. Ensuring trust is a key issue in maintaining the value of the Internet, and several organizations are devoted to meeting this objective, including ICANN and the Internet Society.[1]

Trusted Notifier

A Trusted Notifier is a designated entity for alerting Registries about illegal activity, content, and/or DNS abuse associated with a domain name.[2]

Computer Science

In computer science, trust refers to the generation of authorities or user access/privileges through Cryptography. An entity trusts another entity when the first one makes the assumption that the second one will behave exactly as the first entity expects.[3] Trust is predictability. Identification, authentication, accountability, authorization, and availability support confidence in predictability. Trust is a set of binary relationships based on individual identity or unique characteristic validation.[4] A trust model identifies the specific mechanisms necessary to respond to a specific threat profile.

References