Essentials:
Overview
White Paper
News
License
Technical:
Reputations
Requirements
Platform
Projects:
Talon
Sierra
Reptile (SCDS)
User Content License
Resources:
Definitions
Background
Bibliography
Credits:
Acknowledgements
Founders
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Reputations and Reputation Management Concepts
Every agent within the OpenPrivacy system is based on the Reputation
Management Framework (RMF) which provides the basis for secure,
pseudonymous and distributed communities and other applications.
Sierra is our reference
implementation of a Reputation Management Framework, and is the best
place to look for more information.
Below are some pointers to further reading. (Please see the Definitions page for help with the terminology.)
Secure, Privacy-enhanced Reputation Facility
Reputations are the cornerstone to any virtual community. OpenPrivacy
enables reputations to be used to enhance searching as well as to filter out
unwanted information, all while maintaining complete user privacy. In
addition, the reputation substrate supports the user to:
- accumulate valuable reputation capital for shared profile
information, ideas and publications without needing to divulge identity
- annotate any object with machine-readable opinions (grafts), thus
creating a general purpose and secure reputation facility
- enable opt-in profile/reputation owner contact by third parties
Reputations are first class objects, that can be applied to any entity within
the OpenPrivacy system. In a sense, all objects derive from class Reputation.
Reputations have several component parts, including:
- Reference - the entity URI to which this reputation is attached
- Identity - a unique URL (used for naming and assigning additional reputation)
- Signature - the signature of the assigning party
Additional fields may exist that give additional information to the reputation:
- Payload - one or more semantic names, types and/or values for this reputation
- Ontology - provides semantic categorization for the payload
- Nym - provides direct reference to assigner
- creation date - date when this reputation was created
- expiry date - date when this reputation is no longer valid
- Eternity_checksum - persistent, time-stamped value that ensures
non-repudiation (definition TBD)
- Personalization and Reputation Management
- Channels, articles and indeed all objects within the OpenPrivacy
framework can be enhanced via the grafting of reputation objects.
This provides a facility to provide feedback to the creation,
delivery and presentation aspects of each object, as well as
enabling threshold alerts and other advanced features.
- Privacy and Nym Management
- All reputation grafts (annotations of opinions and/or rankings)
and subscription activities are made pseudonymously through a
client-side "Primary Agent" - part of the peer-to-peer OpenPrivacy
Reputation Management Framework. This Primary Agent creates and
manages nyms for the user transparently, and enables the user to
view, modify and/or delete reputation information whether stored
locally or remotely.
Additional reputation links:
-
https://www.freehaven.net/doc/oreilly/accountability-ch16.html
- In the reputation model, for each exchange, a server risks some
amount of resources that is proportional to its trust that the result
will be satisfactory. As a server's reputation grows, other nodes
become more willing to make larger payments to it.
- The main difference between reputation-based trust systems and
micropayment-based trust systems is that, in reputation-based trust
systems, parties base their decisions in part on information provided
by third parties.
-
https://www.mojonation.net/docs/technical_overview.shtml
- Each Broker maintains its own local database of reputations for other
Brokers, including a list of others with which it has done business
and information about those transactions.
-
https://www.realcommunities.com/newsandevents/newsletteroct.htm
- Reputation Manager ... will alert members about the hierarchy
and ratings of other members, providing visitors with a way to sort
high quality member-generated content from less useful
contributions and highly-rated members from less highly-rated ones.
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https://www.advogato.org/trust-metric.html
- The goal of the trust metric is to accept as many valid accounts
as possible, while also reducing the impact of attackers.
-
https://www.idiom.com/~arkuat/consent/Anarchy.html
- The whole area of digitally-authenticated reputations, and the
"reputation capital" that accumulates or is affected by the opinions
of others, is an area that combines economics, game theory,
psychology, and expectations.
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