With the pervasive of computing facilities in people's work and daily life, humans run into a revolution in communication and thinking, which brings forward computing thinking and social computing. Humans are socially blind and unsure, and thus, trustworthiness has been put on the spot to answer questions including: Can computing facilities be trusted? Can information systems be dependable? Can unknown people in the other end be trustworthy? That's the motivation to establish a workshop named SoTrust. To assure trustworthiness in social computing, extensive reuse, of various resources such as components, services, product lines, patterns, frameworks and etc, is identified as a critical approach. SoTrust2011 aims at bringing togeth...
The 7th edition of the SESS workshop aims at providing a venue for software engineers and security r...
The sharing economy could be an answer to the challenge of sustainability; it can facilitate the sha...
This article considers the question of how we may trust automatically generated program code. The co...
The 1st International Workshop on Trust in Open Source Software (TOSS) focuses on one of the major f...
A compelling direction of improving trustworthiness of software-based systems is to open their ingre...
The potential of software reuse to reduce costs and time while increasing quality in a new project d...
Abstract of a keynote speech given at the Strategic Research Workshop on Engineering Software Intens...
The worldwide software ecosystem is a trust-rich part of the world. Throughout the software life cyc...
The open and dynamic nature of service-based software systems necessitates spontaneous and trustwort...
In this chapter we argue that transparency is worthless in guaranteeing the trustworthiness of the t...
The software ecosystem is a trust-rich part of the world. Collaboratively, software engineers trust ...
International audienceTrust in computer science mostly relies on evaluating the risks of using a too...
Format of the workshop: An introductory presentation, which will set the scene and raise key questio...
Trust can be defined as to have confidence or faith in; a form of reliance or certainty based on pas...
Basic concepts and terminology for trustworthy software systems are discussed. Our discussion of def...
The 7th edition of the SESS workshop aims at providing a venue for software engineers and security r...
The sharing economy could be an answer to the challenge of sustainability; it can facilitate the sha...
This article considers the question of how we may trust automatically generated program code. The co...
The 1st International Workshop on Trust in Open Source Software (TOSS) focuses on one of the major f...
A compelling direction of improving trustworthiness of software-based systems is to open their ingre...
The potential of software reuse to reduce costs and time while increasing quality in a new project d...
Abstract of a keynote speech given at the Strategic Research Workshop on Engineering Software Intens...
The worldwide software ecosystem is a trust-rich part of the world. Throughout the software life cyc...
The open and dynamic nature of service-based software systems necessitates spontaneous and trustwort...
In this chapter we argue that transparency is worthless in guaranteeing the trustworthiness of the t...
The software ecosystem is a trust-rich part of the world. Collaboratively, software engineers trust ...
International audienceTrust in computer science mostly relies on evaluating the risks of using a too...
Format of the workshop: An introductory presentation, which will set the scene and raise key questio...
Trust can be defined as to have confidence or faith in; a form of reliance or certainty based on pas...
Basic concepts and terminology for trustworthy software systems are discussed. Our discussion of def...
The 7th edition of the SESS workshop aims at providing a venue for software engineers and security r...
The sharing economy could be an answer to the challenge of sustainability; it can facilitate the sha...
This article considers the question of how we may trust automatically generated program code. The co...