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Published May 1, 2026 | Version v1.0

Why Trust-Scores Always Fail — And Why Proof-Based Systems Are the Only Scalable Alternative

  • 1. EQUORA Institute (in formation)

Description

This paper argues that trust scores — from credit ratings and ESG scores to AI-generated trust metrics — fail not because of poor implementation, but because trust itself is the wrong abstraction. Trust is not a scalar quantity but a contextual, relational, and topological phenomenon. Any attempt to reduce it to a universal numerical score leads to fragility, manipulation, exclusion, and systemic failure. We identify five structural failure modes (context collapse, Goodhart's Law, epistemic centralization, irreversibility, and metric substitution for truth), supported by historical case studies (Enron, Wirecard, Volkswagen Dieselgate, the 2008 subprime crisis, ESG rating failures). A formal impossibility argument demonstrates that no universal trust score can simultaneously satisfy context independence, temporal stability, observer neutrality, and manipulation resistance. We propose proof-based systems as the alternative paradigm, where trust is not measured but rendered unnecessary through local, irreversible verification. Examples include Bitcoin Proof-of-Work, zero-knowledge proofs, and blockchain-based supply chain traceability.

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