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Trustworthiness is as important as security of the system, according to its users, such as clients, employees and partners. Traditional paper-based trust increasingly has to be replaced with digital signatures and other legally-binding electronic forms of interaction between parties. PKI, Identity Management and Digital Signatures form the basis of Digital Trust. In addition, Time Stamp Authorities, Trusted Document Repositories and e-Notary Service are also vitally needed to build a usable infrastructure of digital trust. We will look at the standards and technologies that enable this concept, and, keeping with reality, we will point out a number of outstanding legal and social issues that may prevent your organization from successfully adopting some principles of digital trust. We will also briefly touch on Digital Rights Management as an aspect of digital trust and its relationship to privacy protection. This session is likely to be of more interest to those working in the public sector, governments, and bigger enterprises interacting with a large consumer base, and consultants working with them.
https://www.microsoft.com/emea/spotlight/sessionh.aspx?videoid=23