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What is Trustworthiness

Developing Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Policies for Promoting Employee Sustainability and Well-Being
The quality of being able to be trusted.
Published in Chapter:
Job Insecurity and Performance: Contributions for an Integrative Theoretical Framework
Ligia Portovedo (University of Minho, Portugal), Ana Veloso (University of Minho, Portugal), and Miguel Portela (University of Minho, Portugal)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-6684-4181-7.ch004
Abstract
Based on published literature between 2000 and 2020 and applying a systematic review, the authors reflect on the theoretical bases that describe the effects of psychological moderating and mediating variables in the relationship between job insecurity and performance. An aggregating theoretical model is proposed, anchored on the conservation of resources theory, social exchange theory, and trust to describe the process in which job insecurity impacts performance, through or in the presence of the variables found.
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Dynamics of User-Generated Content in Industry 4.0
It talks about the authenticity of the source is genuine.
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Subjective and Objective Trustworthiness of Acquaintance Peers
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Internet of Things: Architecture, Challenges, and Future Directions
It ensures that IoT system must demonstrate integrity and verify the trust on the third party.
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Transferring Knowledge in a Knowledge-Based Economy
The level at which two people involved in knowledge sharing trust each other. This trust is based on competence and benevolence.
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A Bird's Eye View of Qualitative Research
The extent to which qualitative research findings are considered reliable, credible, transferable, and confirmable.
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Increasing the Trustworthiness of Collaborative Applications
The ability of the system to do what it exactly expected to do.
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The Changing Nature of Information Behaviour
A perception held by a user as to whether they can rely on, say the information in a digital document, and may be associated with credibility, reputation, and authority.
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Methodology and Method in Case Study Research: Framing Research Design in Practice
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Trusted and Trustworthy Information Technology
Property of an agent to act in the best possible interest of another agent, considering circumstances.
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Building and Management of Trust in Networked Information Systems
The ability to attain and maintain a “trusted state,” which is definable, measurable, validatable, and demonstrable over time. Digital trustworthiness means a verifiable level of electronic process integrity, security, control, authenticity, and reliability that captures, preserves, retrieves, verifies, renders, and makes available in human-readable form — the essential transaction content, context, notice, intent, and consent — to meet the electronic forensic evidence requirements necessary for legal admissibility and regulatory compliance.
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Surveying Trust in Virtual Organizations
The ability to attain and maintain a “trusted state,” which is definable, measurable, validatable, and demonstrable over time. Digital trustworthiness means a verifiable level of electronic process integrity, security, control, authenticity, and reliability; that captures, preserves, retrieves, verifies, renders and makes available in human readable form; the essential transaction content, context, notice, intent and consent, to meet the electronic forensic evidence requirements necessary for legal admissibility and regulatory compliance.
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