That sounds like an interesting mechanism to help measure consensus - and a good way to do that would help bitcoin significantly I think. I don't quite see what the similarity is between Trust Metric and bitcoin tho. How would you propose "building it into" bitcoin? 

From my limited searching, it looks like trust metric is basically a graph of who trusts who, allowing you to quantify who's trusted among a particular set or subset of people. Is that right? I would think such a thing can be done completely separately from bitcoin, but used to answer questions about bitcoin.

I'm curious to know specifically how the metric works and how its resistant to adversaries, specifically how its sybil resistant. In particular I'm curious what weaknesses it has that could be gamed. It seems sybil resistance might be there for a while, but I can imagine that it might be possible for a colluding set of users to farm aliases with higher and higher reputation until they could take over the network. In bitcoin, there are good ways of bolstering such sybil resistance, eg by charging fees for identities in some way, or by requiring proof of funds. 

On Sun, Jun 5, 2022 at 8:19 AM Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
(apologies i am subscribed digest)

On Sun, Jun 5, 2022 at 1:00 PM
<bitcoin-dev-request@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:

> Date: Sun, 05 Jun 2022 04:18:04 +0000
> From: alicexbt <alicexbt@protonmail.com>
> To: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
>         <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>
> Subject: Re: [bitcoin-dev] Bitcoin covenants are inevitable
> Message-ID:
>         <zyE-uR_2M7vAE8jXf3wthIGQj_-dz9FoL50ERTmCb-MCv4zyMgoHAdSff539SPtROJpJdgrfBspM3IZJrNQ9V4kpDnyMB9X6mlWf0eSk1Rk=@protonmail.com>
> Hi Jorge,
>
>
> Misinformation is false or inaccurate information, especially that which is deliberately intended to deceive.
> A combination of 'misleading' and 'information'.

it's a classic technique that was refined by psy-ops well over
60 years ago.  it should come as no surprise at all that it is
being systematically deployed to undermine bitcoin.
(welcome to the party, all psy-ops teams reading this: i admire your
 persistence and tenacity. you serve an extremely useful purpose
 of detecting flaws in the resilience of bitcoin and its development.)

a potential solution is Trust Metrics. the most successful open
source experiment in that regard was advogato.org by Raph Levien.

i expanded it greatly so that any user could specify the "seeds"
whom *they* trusted, rather than being forced to utilise the fixed
hard-coded user ids in the advogato.org source code (this difference
is extremely important for de-centralisation)

public declarations of trust, and their propagation through standard
Maximum-Flow Graph analysis, helps greatly to filter out the crap.
advogato deflected heavy systematic and sustained spam attacks
thanks to the simple expedient of users declaring publicly whom
they trusted.

a more advanced version of the max-flow concept came up a few
years later called keynote (RFC2704)

the similarity between trust metric evaluation and the bitcoin protocol
is so remarkable that i am, frankly, slightly stunned that it was not
added right from the start.

it is ironic that the lack of integrated trust metric evaluation built-in
to the bitcoin protocol is now hampering developers from being able
to evaluate whom to trust when it comes to protocol development.

l.
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