The Role of Trustworthiness Facets for Developing Social Media Applications: A Structured Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
2.1. Trustworthiness Facets
2.2. Placing Trustworthiness Facets in the Context of Trust
2.3. Trust-Building through Software in the Past
3. Literature Review of Trustworthiness Facets
3.1. Methodology
3.2. Results
4. Guideline for Selecting Trustworthiness Facets for CMI Applications
4.1. The Problem
4.2. Acquiring an Understanding
4.3. Identifying Facets Based on User Statements
4.4. Identifying Facets Based on Other Sources
5. Example: Applying the Guideline and the Overview to Catfishing
6. Discussion
6.1. Trustworthiness Facets in Regard to the Reviewed Literature
6.2. Evaluating the Guideline Regarding the Catfishing Example
6.3. Trustworthiness Facets in Regard to Initial Trust and Knowledge-Based Trust within CMI Applications
6.4. Misuse of Trustworthiness Facets
6.5. Limitation and Future Work
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
CMI | Computer-Mediated Introduction |
TrustSoft | Method for Trust-Related Software Features |
PRISMA-P | Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols |
UML | Unified Modeling Lanuage |
Appendix A
Trustworthiness Facets | Definition | References |
---|---|---|
Ability, competence, expertise, knowledge, skill, wisdom, business sense, influence, power | Skills or characteristics that enable to fulfill obligations or to have impact in a specific domain. | [5,65,66,67,68,69,70,71,72,73,74,75] |
Accessibility, approachability, attentiveness, availability, openness, receptivity | Being physically present when needed, mentally open and receptive, easy to talk to and a careful listener. | [20,26,68,69,71,74,75,76] |
Attractiveness | Being appealing to others. | [20,73,77] |
Benevolence, availability, candor, care, loyalty, openness, receptivity, agreeableness, selflessness, honesty, altruism, goodwill | Having concerns about others, wanting something good for others and acting in their interest without an egocentric motive. | [5,20,24,26,69,71,73,74,75,76,78,79] |
Confidentiality, discreetness | Entrusted knowledge is kept in confidence. | [68,69,80] |
Emotional stability | “[B]eing calm, enthusiastic, free from anxiety, depression and insecurity” [68] | [73] |
Empathy | The ability to comprehend feelings of others. | [26] |
Extraversion, dynamism | Talkativeness, sociability, friendliness | [73,74] |
Honesty, credibility, truthfulness, authenticity, openness, accuracy, willingness to disclose | Correctness of information and freely sharing information and ideas | [20,26,66,68,70,71,72,76] |
Humbleness | The notion to not take oneself more important than others | [27] |
Integrity, fairness, consistency, reliability, discreetness, morality, ethicality, credibility, honesty | The trustee complies to the trustor’s accepted principles (e.g., moral, ethical) that are predictable and reliable leading to equity. | [7,26,65,67,68,69,72,73,74,75,78,81] |
Justice, fairness | The trustee morally respects the trustor’s interests and the trustor herself—especially concerning provided information and interactions. | [68,82,83] |
Likability, rapport | Friendliness, high sympathy and a person with whom the trustor wants to spend time together and cooperate. | [71,84,85] |
Predictability, consistency, reliability, good judgement, promise fulfillment, dependability, conscientiousness, performance | A stability in one’s actions that is based on recurring behaviour, the ability to make good decisions, being productive and carrying out responsibilities reliably. | [68,69,73,74,75,76,79,86] |
Popularity, social desirability | Social or cultural approval, socially desirable | [74,79] |
Reputation | The perceived identity of a trustee which reflects personality traits, behaviour or presented images that is based on the trustor’s own observations over a period of time or on secondary sources. | [19,87] |
Respectfulness | The trustee regards “others and their perspective as valuable” [26] | [26] |
Similarity, shared understanding, share of values | Perception of shared interests, values, appearance, lifestyle, status or culture | [20,65,71,72,85,88] |
Trustworthiness Facets | Definition | References |
---|---|---|
Ability, competence, expertise, credibility | The system is believed to have the skills and expertise to perform and act effectively in specific domains and to fulfill its promised services and responsibilities. Based on that, the user accepts its advice and believes its output. | [14,21,56,57,85,89,90,91,92] |
Benevolence, helpfulness, goodwill | The system acts in the user’s interests, cares for him/her, is well-intentioned and provides help or guidance when needed. | [14,21,56,57,85,89] |
Information quality, content quality, data-related quality (consists of data integrity, data reliability, data timeliness, data validity), usefulness | The system provides sufficient information that is accurate, understandable, useful, complete, relevant and timely updated so that the user is able to evaluate the context (e.g., product, service, seller). | [14,24,63,85,93,94] |
Integrity, compliance, compatibility | The system complies with standards (e.g., industry specific standards) or regulations, adheres to the user’s accepted ethical or moral codes and is compatible with his/her beliefs or values. | [14,21,24,56,57,77,90] |
Non-Repudiation | Ability to prove to sender that data has been delivered and to prove to receiver the sender identity for an unambiguous data transmission. | [24] |
Openness, transparency | The system provides how it works and complies to standards and regulations. | [24,93] |
Performance, reliability, predictability, dependability, functionality, accuracy, availability, failure tolerance, accountability, responsiveness, result demonstrability, correctness | The system executes correctly to accomplish the service that it promises. It is predictable despite potential failures and delivers proper outputs. | [14,15,21,24,56,77,85,95,96,97,98,99] |
Privacy, confidentiality | Privacy refers to the provision of information and the risk of its exposure to unintended parties. Systems, which respect their users’ privacy, limit the access of the users’ data to only authorized agents and enable users to take control of its usage. | [24,63,85,92,96,98,99] |
Reputation, image, brand strength, visibility | On the one hand, the technology’s recognition and how much it might enhance the user’s social status. On the other hand, an “easy identification of the [associated] company and its activity sector” [98]. | [77,92,97,98,100] |
Safety | The system operates in a way that keeps its users’ life and property safe and does not risk any harm or injuries. | [15,24,63] |
Security, confidentiality | The system knows its users’ vulnerabilities and protects them and their resources against attacks, misuses and unauthorized access. | [15,24,63,85,92,95,96,99,101,102] |
Situational normality, social presence | The perception that the system is “normal, proper, or suited to a successful venture” as well as “personal, sociable, and [has] sensitive human elements, creating a feeling of human touch” [58]. | [20,21,63] |
Usability, comprehensibility, effectiveness, ease-of-use, efficiency | A system designed in a way that enables users to effortlessly use it with easy access to understandable information that supports users in the usage. | [21,24,57,92,93,94,96,97,102] |
Website quality, completeness, perceived usefulness, web site design, interface design, likeability | On the one hand, the extent to which the implemented set of software features meet the needs of its users. One the other hand, an attractive graphical design in terms of structure, navigation and content. | [14,21,24,63,85,94,96,97,102] |
Trustworthiness Facets | Definition | References |
---|---|---|
Ability, competence, financial balance, quality assurance | Knowledge and skills to provide the service or product promised by the organization (while being both effective and efficient in regard to expended costs) | [19,20,22,23,75,92] |
Benevolence, concern, goodness, morality, caring, interactional courtesy, responsibility to inform | Respecting and showing respect to the interests of the consumers and not taking advantage of their vulnerability. | [19,20,22,75] |
Familiarity, similarity | Perception of same values or interests | [66,78,85,103] |
Integrity, (procedural) fairness, justice, legal compliance, structural assurance | The existence of principles, values, standards or regulations (e.g., law, organizational policies, organizational procedures, contracts) to which an organization corresponds as promised. This most often relates to a high quality of treatment and equity. | [19,20,22,23,68,81,83,95,104,105] |
Openness, honesty, transparency, confidential information sharing, responsibility to inform, comprehensibility | The availability, simplicity or clarity of information disclosed by an organization that allow individuals to comprehend the performance or internal workings of that organization. | [19,22,71,74,75,106] |
Performance | Current actions for providing a service or product, which may involve the delivery, relative costs and the performance of the service/product itself. | [71] |
Reliability, credibility, consistency, dependability, responsibility, predictability | The organization complies by its actions with its promises and offers guidance and support in times of crisis. | [19,23,75,102,104] |
Reputation, prototypical organizational identity, brand image | Perception of an organization’s culture, attributes, beliefs, values or prestige based on customer’s own experience or hearsay from secondary sources. | [20,71,74,78,83,93,96,97] |
Responsiveness, interactivity | Being responsive to the customers’ requests and providing rapid feedback | [22,85,93,98] |
Security | The organization provides a comfortable, assured and safe feeling | [20] |
Situational normality | The individual’s belief of an organization’s success based on the perception how customary a situation with the organization seems to be | [19,102] |
Size | The larger a company overall size and its market share position, the more experience it seems to have leading to a higher perception of trustworthiness. | [71,96,97,102] |
Willingness to customize, service customization | Specialized equipment or adaptation of production processes or services to meet the customer’s needs. | [71,93,96,97,98,102] |
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Borchert, A.; Heisel, M. The Role of Trustworthiness Facets for Developing Social Media Applications: A Structured Literature Review. Information 2022, 13, 34. https://doi.org/10.3390/info13010034
Borchert A, Heisel M. The Role of Trustworthiness Facets for Developing Social Media Applications: A Structured Literature Review. Information. 2022; 13(1):34. https://doi.org/10.3390/info13010034
Chicago/Turabian StyleBorchert, Angela, and Maritta Heisel. 2022. "The Role of Trustworthiness Facets for Developing Social Media Applications: A Structured Literature Review" Information 13, no. 1: 34. https://doi.org/10.3390/info13010034
APA StyleBorchert, A., & Heisel, M. (2022). The Role of Trustworthiness Facets for Developing Social Media Applications: A Structured Literature Review. Information, 13(1), 34. https://doi.org/10.3390/info13010034