(OLDER) <- More Stuff -> (NEWER) (NEWEST)
Kerio Reseller
Printer Friendly Version

Trust


2008/10/02

Index by Subject

  • Marek Kohn
  • Oxford Universty Press
  • 9780199217915


"Trust" has little to do with computers or computing. It doesn't really have a lot to do with business, either. Oh, it does talk about the Internet quite a bit, and certainly the implicit trust relationships of business come into play, but really it falls outside of the subjects we usually talk about here.


Hate these ads?

This is a short book. I read it before breakfast, still in bed. It's not going to tie you up for days, although you may want to go back and read it again (I did). I think it's a very powerful book, interesting, thought provoking and very much worth reading and passing on to other thinking people.

One Amazon reviewer complained that it is too scholarly. I don't agree at all: I don't think anything here is beyond the reach of an average well-read person. You don't need a degree in Humanities or Philosophy to read this - it may be peppered with references to scholarly books and ideas, but it's perfectly readable by any intelligent person.

The author builds the case that trustful societies are healthy societies and suggests that we, as individuals and in governments, should be consciously working to promote and enhance trust among ourselves. The base idea isn't new ("Do unto others" isn't necessarily altruistic), but its application as political philosophy has never had great support. I read Kohn as suggesting that it should, not for reasons of religious ideals, but for practical improvement of the fabric of society.

I agree with that. Trust is the glue that holds societies together. Lack of trust does create unhappiness and worse (far worse). Fostering trust at every level, from our individual relationships to our political structures, can help improve all of our lives.

Grab yourself a copy of this. Read it, think about it, talk about it. I think it is that important.

graphic of book cover Order (or just read more about) Trust  from Amazon.com












Enter your email address for automatic notification of new posts here
(be sure to whitelist 'feedburner.com' if you use spam filtering)

Or use any RSS reader

Delivered by FeedBurner





Views for this page
Today This Week This Month This Year  Overall
131120868 868

numly esn 62668-081002-543816-33
numly barcode

Have you tried Searching this site?

Unix/Linux/Mac OS X support by phone, email or on-site: Support Rates

This is a Unix/Linux resource website. It contains technical articles about Unix, Linux and general computing related subjects, opinion, news, help files, how-to's, tutorials and more. We appreciate comments and article submissions.

Publishing your articles here

pavatar.jpg
Psst - Wanna work for yourself?

More:
       - Books
       - Reviews
       - Opinion




Unix/Linux Consultants

Your ad here - $48.00 yearly!

http://www.vss3.com SCO/Caldera OpenServer, Unixware & Linux. Tarantella & Non-stop Clustering


http://thatitguy.com Business networking servers, Linux and Unix experts. In business since 1997! Windows and Exchange to Samba and Scalix migration experts.


http://www.schewanick.com SCO Unix, Solaris, Linx (various), PHP, MySQL, Apache, uniBasic, dL4, Perl, System Administration and more....



Twitter
  • Nov 21 07:55
    @loudmouthman: correct, but how do you prove ANYTHING like that is accurate? You can't. A text file is no better or worse than anything.
  • Nov 21 07:40
    @loudmouthman: well, a digital signature could prove it hadn't been altered. Text is no more insecure than anything else in that sense.







Coming Attractions

My Favorites

Change Congress


Related Posts