Published: October 14, 2010
Citation: Computer (IEEE Computer) vol. 43, no. 10, (October 2010) pp. 85-87
Author(s)
K. Miller, Jeffrey Voas, Phillip Laplante
Announcement
The term trust has had a well understood definition for centuries. However after e-trust came along, and then cloud, where e-trust is not sufficient due to the non-touchability of a public cloud, the need to reconsider what trust means for a public cloud arises. This paper looks at the issues of this problem.
The term trust has had a well understood definition for centuries. However after e-trust came along, and then cloud, where e-trust is not sufficient due to the non-touchability of a public cloud, the need to reconsider what trust means for a public cloud arises. This paper looks at the issues of...
See full abstract
The term trust has had a well understood definition for centuries. However after e-trust came along, and then cloud, where e-trust is not sufficient due to the non-touchability of a public cloud, the need to reconsider what trust means for a public cloud arises. This paper looks at the issues of this problem.
Hide full abstract
Keywords
cloud computing; trust; e-trust; security and privacy
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