Rational Trust Modeling
Mehrdad Nojoumian

TL;DR
This paper introduces rational trust modeling by integrating game theory into trust management, enabling incentivization of trustworthy behavior and prevention of common attacks, with formal analysis of strategic interactions.
Contribution
It formalizes the concept of rational trust modeling, combining trust management with game theory to incentivize trustworthiness and enhance security.
Findings
Trust models can be designed to incentivize honest behavior.
Game theory analysis helps predict player strategies.
The approach can prevent well-known trust attacks.
Abstract
Trust models are widely used in various computer science disciplines. The main purpose of a trust model is to continuously measure trustworthiness of a set of entities based on their behaviors. In this article, the novel notion of "rational trust modeling" is introduced by bridging trust management and game theory. Note that trust models/reputation systems have been used in game theory (e.g., repeated games) for a long time, however, game theory has not been utilized in the process of trust model construction; this is where the novelty of our approach comes from. In our proposed setting, the designer of a trust model assumes that the players who intend to utilize the model are rational/selfish, i.e., they decide to become trustworthy or untrustworthy based on the utility that they can gain. In other words, the players are incentivized (or penalized) by the model itself to act properly.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAccess Control and Trust · Cryptography and Data Security · Blockchain Technology Applications and Security
