This book provides an assessment of the current state of the art for building trustworthy networked information systems. It proposes directions for research in computer and network security, software technology, and system architecture. In addition, it assesses current technical and market trends in order to better inform public policy as to where progress is likely and where incentives could help. Trust in Cyberspace offers insights into:
• The strengths and vulnerabilities of the telephone network and Internet,
the two likely building blocks of any networked information system.
• The implications for trustworthiness of anticipated developments in hardware
and software technology, including the consequences of mobile code.
• The shifts in security technology and research resulting from replacing
centralized mainframes with networks of computers.
• The heightened concern for integrity and availability where once only secrecy mattered.
• The way in which federal research funding levels and practices have affected the
evolution and current state of the science and technology base in this area.
You will want to read this book if your life is touched in any way by computers or telecommunications. But then, whose life isn’t?