Must Fix Trust': Privacy-enhancing technologies as reductive tool
conference paper
Privacy-enhancing and other related digital technologies are marketed as increasing trust within the digital society. They are deployed as means to assert trust in digital transactions and interactions between actors. What this commentary argues is that digital trust is thereby reduced to the product of a technological iteration, insertion, or fix: more encryption ≃ more privacy ≃ more trust. However righteous it may be to foster privacy, the promise to uphold something as uncertain as trust by the use of mathematics and/or statistics alone is short-sighted. Lofty notions like ‘data minimisation’ and ‘privacy-by-design’ rest on deterministic assumptions. We suggest that in reductively appropriating the concept of trust and failing to meet expectations, the consequences of the technification of trust – i.e., the making of trust a product of technê (alone) – are paradoxical in that they actually undermine trust, by centralising power within tech companies.
TNO Identifier
1016001
Source title
Amsterdam Trust Summit 2025 (forthcoming on August 28 and 29, 2025)
Place of publication
Den Haag
Pages
1-9