Abstract
This paper contributes to the debate on online trust addressing the problem of whether an online environment satisfies the necessary conditions for the emergence of trust. The paper defends the thesis that online environments can foster trust, and it does so in three steps. Firstly, the arguments proposed by the detractors of online trust are presented and analysed. Secondly, it is argued that trust can emerge in uncertain and risky environments and that it is possible to trust online identities when they are diachronic and sufficient data are available to assess their reputation. Finally, a definition of trust as a second-order property of first-order relation is endorsed in order to present a new definition of online trust. According to such a definition, online trust is an occurrence of trust that specifically qualifies the relation of communication ongoing among individuals in digital environments. On the basis of this analysis, the paper concludes by arguing that online trust promotes the emergence of social behaviours rewarding honest and transparent communications.
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From here on this type of environment will be called ‘online environment’. The Internet is an instance of an online environment. All the explanatory examples used in this paper refer to the Internet as a case of online environment.
The reader is referred to Taddeo (2009) for an analysis of the conceptual misunderstandings on which such a thesis rests.
Please note that the connection between trust and lack of safety is made also in Nissenbaum (2001). The difference is on considering trust as a minimizing factor of social uncertainty.
A diachronic identity is an identity that does not change over time.
Please note that the task that an agent is trusted to perform may entail both performing or not performing a given action. Consider for example the cases in which A may trust B not to sell him a faulty product. In this case, A expects B to perform the task of providing a perfectly working product. In the same way if A trusts B not to be violent, A is actually expecting B to be patient or quiet.
For a comprehensive treatment of what is called ‘semantic information’ see Floridi (Fourthcoming). The Philosophy of Information. Oxford, Oxford University Press. The reader should note that in the studies mentioned above the term ‘information’ is used in a broad manner. The analysis of the epistemic nature and of the properties of information as semantic content falls outside the scope of this paper. For this reason we will disregard the distinction between information, dis- and mis- information and the related philosophical debate as well as the debate on the nature of information developed on the basis of Shannon’s Information Theory Shannon and Weaver (1949).
Please note that no assumption is made on the type of advantage enjoyed by the trustor, nor on whether it can be quantified.
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Turilli, M., Vaccaro, A. & Taddeo, M. The Case of Online Trust. Know Techn Pol 23, 333–345 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12130-010-9117-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12130-010-9117-5