disrupt people’s faith and trust to each other and to the democratic process because that’s less
to things, but actually designing the zero-trust parameters using the latest zero knowledge, homomorphic encryption, and so on.
Like the, I know, National Public Radio or something. Somebody that’s well-trusted across
We are currently also the ministry promoting zero-trust architceture using cloud identities
now. With the Right to Information Commission and Media Ministry, nearly six years’ period, we’ve developed understanding and trust.
Trusts Network Architecture reform, the ZK principle toward all the essential services, including on My Data platform.
Yeah, basically piloting the way of zero-knowledge trust, without sacrificing pseudonymity
The people who work there are not creative at all. Trust me. I know them. They don’t have any
and of assembly, people must know for sure, not just blindly trusting that the speech they make on the Internet will not be used against them.
, even though they don’t completely trust the system. That’s the new element that we’re looking at.
This iterative process itself rebuilds trust, rather than particular wise decision at any given
kidding me? What’s the legitimacy? I didn’t vote for them. Two, I don’t trust them."
It’s not necessarily just Taiwan, with the same trust-building we did with Uber and the taxi
...17, yeah. It talks about cross-sectoral trust. It talks about open data. It talks about
They’re not going to change, and they still want to practice, and they can’t trust it. We let
The key here is actually that I think during crowdsourcing, the trust between citizen
That’s great. Actually, you mentioned the IoT all around Taiwan, trusting government sources
still crucial in order to build mutual trust, especially over food.
of wisdom. [laughs] It’s fascinating to put trust in the middle. It’s something to meditate on. It’s much
in the democratic process, to make sure that people don’t trust each other anymore. That is the endgame