trusted$508163$ - meaning and definition. What is trusted$508163$
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What (who) is trusted$508163$ - definition

Trusted-client; Trusted-Client; Trusted Client

Trusted path         
MECHANISM THAT PROVIDES CONFIDENCE THAT THE USER IS COMMUNICATING WITH WHAT THE USER INTENDED TO COMMUNICATE WITH
Trusted channel
A trusted path or trusted channel is a mechanism that provides confidence that the user is communicating with what the user intended to communicate with, ensuring that attackers can't intercept or modify whatever information is being communicated.
Trusted Computing         
TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPED AND PROMOTED BY THE TRUSTED COMPUTING GROUP
Trusted computing; Treacherous computing; Trusted Computing Platform; Treacherous Computing; User:Walklooker/draft for `trusted computing'; Remote attestation; Sealed storage; Endorsement key
Trusted Computing (TC) is a technology developed and promoted by the Trusted Computing Group. The term is taken from the field of trusted systems and has a specialized meaning that is distinct from the field of Confidential Computing.
Trusted computing base         
SET OF ALL COMPUTER COMPONENTS CRITICAL TO ITS SECURITY
Trusted Computing Base; Trusted computer system; Trusted base
The trusted computing base (TCB) of a computer system is the set of all hardware, firmware, and/or software components that are critical to its security, in the sense that bugs or vulnerabilities occurring inside the TCB might jeopardize the security properties of the entire system. By contrast, parts of a computer system outside the TCB must not be able to misbehave in a way that would leak any more privileges than are granted to them in accordance to the security policy.

Wikipedia

Trusted client

In computing, a trusted client is a device or program controlled by the user of a service, but with restrictions designed to prevent its use in ways not authorized by the provider of the service. That is, the client is a device that vendors trust and then sell to the consumers, whom they do not trust. Examples include video games played over a computer network or the Content Scramble System (CSS) in DVDs.

Trusted client software is considered fundamentally insecure: once the security is broken by one user, the break is trivially copyable and available to others. As computer security specialist Bruce Schneier states, "Against the average user, anything works; there's no need for complex security software. Against the skilled attacker, on the other hand, nothing works." Trusted client hardware is somewhat more secure, but not a complete solution.

Trusted clients are attractive to business as a form of vendor lock-in: sell the trusted client at a loss and charge more than would be otherwise economically viable for the associated service. One early example was radio receivers that were subsidized by broadcasters, but restricted to receiving only their radio station. Modern examples include video recorders being forced by law to include Macrovision copy protection, the DVD region code system and region-coded video game consoles.

Trusted computing aims to create computer hardware which assists in the implementation of such restrictions in software, and attempts to make circumvention of these restrictions more difficult.