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[Commlist] Call for Papers – Amsterdam Trust Summit 2025
Fri Feb 14 09:59:44 GMT 2025
Call for Papers – Amsterdam Trust Summit 2025
Don’t miss the chance to contribute to our annual Amsterdam Trust
Summit, hosted by theTrust in the Digital SocietyResearch Priority Area,
on August 28–29, 2025!
In recent years trust has become one of the central concepts in the
digital society. On the one hand, the trustworthiness of our information
infrastructures, such as platforms, AI, encrypted communications emerged
as a central concern. On the other hand, trust relations in the digital
society, such as trust in expertise, science, news, or public
institutions have been fundamentally disrupted.
We are at a critical juncture, where these two challenges meet. There is
no rightly vested trust in the digital society without trustworthy
information-communication technologies. The Amsterdam Trust Summit
invites researchers, practitioners, policymakers, and activists to come
together and start building a comprehensive account of the trust
dynamics in the digital society.
Contributions are welcome for various tracks:
- Theories of trust and distrust in the digital society
- Trust dynamics around emerging technologies
- Individual trusting behaviors and their impacts
- Trustworthiness safeguards of socio-technical infrastructures
- Narratives of trust and distrust in popular culture
- Innovative methods for studying trust in the information age
Submit your work and learn more
here:https://digitaltrust.uva.nl/amsterdam-trust-summit-2025/call-for-papers-ats-2025.html
<https://digitaltrust.uva.nl/amsterdam-trust-summit-2025/call-for-papers-ats-2025.html>
Deadline for submissions: February 28, 2025
Trust is the latest shared societal resource to be disrupted by digital
innovation on a global scale. We see a growing distrust in institutions,
practices, professions which were highly trusted before. More and more
people have less confidence than before in journalism, science,
vaccines, schools and universities, otherwise fair and reliable public
institutions. Political polarization creates tensions in interpersonal
trust relations, and sometimes tear friendships, and even families
apart. While skepticism and distrust can also be understood as liberal
democratic virtues, online they are all too often subject to
‘weaponization’ at the hands of trolls, online influencers, lying
politicians and sock puppet accounts connected to authoritarian state
sponsored disinformation campaigns. In online environments, where
outrage often leads to higher levels of 'engagement', these dynamics
feed into new ‘coalitions of distrust’ forming across and between
different groups united by their shared antagonism of 'the mainstream'.
On the other end of the spectrum, we also see an increase of
‘overconfidence’ in untrustworthy actors. Throughout history, people
have often placed trust in the wrong hands, but what distinguishes the
present is the scale at which this occurs online, where accountability
is frequently lacking. The rise of the sharing economy has made it
common to trust strangers with our homes, cars, and personal belongings,
often without fully considering the risks involved. Similarly, the
growing presence of generative AI has led many to trust the output of
these systems without hesitation in their daily lives. Trust is fluid,
and there are just too many opportunities for it to flow into the wrong
places: the untrustworthy seem to be increasingly trusted, while the
trustworthy aren’t.
In each case we may be facing a slightly different formulation of the
same fundamental questions. First: what makes these new digital
innovations (un)trustworthy? What mix of regulation, transparency,
accountability, oversights, technical design, business models will
provide the greatest confidence that our new digital infrastructures can
deliver on their promises, while keeping the best interest of their
users and of the society in mind?
Second, how does digital innovation shape trust in the digital society?
What are the dynamics that shape trust relations vis-à-vis other people,
institutions, technologies, etc.? How do the different components of
trust change and transform due to digitization: the circumstances of the
one who trusts, the characteristics of the one to be trusted, the
environment in which trust emerges (or not).
Third, what are the (unintended) consequences of the disruption of trust
relations and the emergence of these new trust mediators to individuals,
organizations, and society more broadly? And what may be effective
pathways to, on the one hand, leverage the benefits of some of these
developments while, on the other hand, addressing the risks and the
issues that they bring?
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