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Liars and Outliers: Enabling the Trust that Society Needs to Thrive
 
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Liars and Outliers: Enabling the Trust that Society Needs to Thrive [Formato Kindle]

Bruce Schneier (Autore)
3.0 su 5 stelle  Visualizza tutte le recensioni (1 recensione cliente)

Prezzo edizione digitale: EUR 20,60 Cos'è?
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Risparmi: EUR 7,56 (34%)

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Sinossi

How does society function when you can't trust everyone?

When we think about trust, we naturally think about personal relationships or bank vaults. That's too narrow. Trust is much broader, and much more important. Nothing in society works without trust. It's the foundation of communities, commerce, democracy—everything.

In this insightful and entertaining book, Schneier weaves together ideas from across the social and biological sciences to explain how society induces trust. He shows how trust works and fails in social settings, communities, organizations, countries, and the world.

In today's hyper-connected society, understanding the mechanisms of trust is as important as understanding electricity was a century ago. Issues of trust and security are critical to solving problems as diverse as corporate responsibility, global warming, and our moribund political system. After reading Liars and Outliers, you'll think about social problems, large and small, differently.

AUTHOR BIO

BRUCE SCHNEIER is an internationally renowned security technologist who studies the human side of security. He is the author of eleven books; and hundreds of articles, essays, and academic papers. He has testified before Congress, is a frequent guest on television and radio, and is regularly quoted in the press.

"The closest thing the security industry has to a rock star."
The Register

ADVANCE PRAISE FOR LIARS AND OUTLIERS

"A rich, insightfully fresh take on what security really means!"
—DAVID ROPEIK, Author of How Risky is it, Really?

"Schneier has accomplished a spectacular tour de force: an enthralling ride through history, economics, and psychology, searching for the meanings of trust and security. A must read."
ALESSANDRO ACQUISTI, Associate Professor of Information Systems and Public Policy at the Heinz College, Carnegie Mellon University

"Liars and Outliers offers a major contribution to the understandability of these issues, and has the potential to help readers cope with the ever-increasing risks to which we are being exposed. It is well written and delightful to read."
PETER G. NEUMANN, Principal Scientist in the SRI International Computer Science Laboratory

"Whether it's banks versus robbers, Hollywood versus downloaders, or even the Iranian secret police against democracy activists, security is often a dynamic struggle between a majority who want to impose their will, and a minority who want to push the boundaries. Liars and Outliers will change how you think about conflict, our security, and even who we are."
ROSS ANDERSON, Professor of Security Engineering at Cambridge University and author of Security Engineering

"Readers of Bruce Schneier's Liars and Outliers will better understand technology and its consequences and become more mature practitioners."
PABLO G. MOLINA, Professor of Technology Management, Georgetown University

"Liars & Outliers is not just a book about security—it is the book about it. Schneier shows that the power of humour can be harnessed to explore even a serious subject such as security. A great read!"
FRANK FUREDI, author of On Tolerance: A Defence of Moral Independence

"This fascinating book gives an insightful and convincing framework for understanding security and trust."
JEFF YAN, Founding Research Director, Center for Cybercrime and Computer Security, Newcastle University

"By analyzing the moving parts and interrelationships among security, trust, and society, Schneier has identifi ed critical patterns, pressures, levers, and security holes within society. Clearly written, thoroughly interdisciplinary, and always smart, Liars and Outliers provides great insight into res...


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3.0 su 5 stelle Boring but probably worth reading, 14 marzo 2012
This book is about people, not technology: unfortunately it's rather boring, expressing concepts mostly old, known and obvious.
Yes, men have the tendency to gather in groups to prosecute common goals they usually could not reach alone. Yet competing interests often arise and some people decide to defect from the group norm, pursuing opposite matters and usually damaging the community. Depending on the group, it can defend itself either by making/enforcing laws or exerting moral, civic or institutional pressures. All these means hinge on the same concept though: make cooperation more profitable than defection. It's all a matter of equilibria and trades off indeed.
Community cannot afford neither to eliminate outliers (costs too much) nor tolerate an high percentage of them (would thwart group purpose). On the other hand, group members should carefully consider the drawbacks if they choose not to cooperate.
Some game theory concepts like prisoner's dilemma or other simple economic models may help describe better these issues and modern technology shifts some of these equilibria points, but essentially all of this is nothing new.
This is the way the world works: humanity knows it since many thousand of years. It's common knowledge that society works because most people are honest most of the time and (some sort of) trust represent the glue that keeps everything together.
Sure, society's more complex than that and if you really want, you might spend some time and develop these concepts further. The problem with this book however is that it goes on for some 250 pages combining the concepts above over and over, essentially flooding you with a ton of self evident examples.
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&quote;
Trust is the expectation that arises within a community of regular, honest, and cooperative behavior, based on commonly shared norms, on the part of other members of that community. &quote;
Evidenziato da 15 utenti Kindle
&quote;
He established that the mean human group size is 150.14 This is the Dunbar number: the number of people with whom we can have explicit and personal encounters, whose history we can remember, and with whom we can experience some level of intimacy.15 &quote;
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&quote;
Thus security was born, the planet's fourth oldest activity after eating, eliminating, and reproducing. &quote;
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