IIC Journal of Innovation 9th Edition | Page 18

Trustworthiness in Industrial System Design Government Law Industrial Regulations national and international (EU, UN etc.) requirements and standards (ISO, IEC, IEEE etc.) y ac Trustworthiness Sa f i li en ce R e l ia b ili t y Best Practice Engineering general, industry-specific and system-specific science, general and industry-specific Figure 3: The Trustworthiness Foundation Model It is still possible to redirect the arrows, but the definition of the quadrants needs to be modified, as shown in Figure 3. Quadrants are fundamental sources of knowledge and directives which influence trustworthiness. And again, the five trustworthiness characteristics can be drawn with sharp boundaries between the quadrants:   Privacy is heavily defined by government law. The European community started with GDPR; it is expected that other countries will follow very soon with their own laws. Similarly, safety is defined more deeply in government law, not just around September 2018  - 14 - consumer products such as automobiles, but also environment-critical systems like nuclear plants or oil refineries. On the other hand, industrial associations are providing additional regulations and policies for their specific industries, which are documented in standards from international organizations such as ISO, IEC or IEEE to define safety regulations. Security is affected again by such standards but also by engineering knowledge. Such knowledge may be general (e.g., IT and network security) but also limited in their usage for specific industrial branches only.