4,345 research outputs found

    What did I really vote for? On the usability of verifiable e-voting schemes

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    E-voting has been embraced by a number of countries, delivering benefits in terms of efficiency and accessibility. End-to-end verifiable e-voting schemes facilitate verification of the integrity of individual votes during the election process. In particular, methods for cast-as-intended verification enable voters to confirm that their cast votes have not been manipulated by the voting client. A well-known technique for effecting cast-as-intended verification is the Benaloh Challenge. The usability of this challenge is crucial because voters have to be actively engaged in the verification process. In this paper, we report on a usability evaluation of three different approaches of the Benaloh Challenge in the remote e-voting context. We performed a comparative user study with 95 participants. We conclude with a recommendation for which approaches should be provided to afford verification in real-world elections and suggest usability improvements

    Secure and Verifiable Electronic Voting in Practice: the use of vVote in the Victorian State Election

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    The November 2014 Australian State of Victoria election was the first statutory political election worldwide at State level which deployed an end-to-end verifiable electronic voting system in polling places. This was the first time blind voters have been able to cast a fully secret ballot in a verifiable way, and the first time a verifiable voting system has been used to collect remote votes in a political election. The code is open source, and the output from the election is verifiable. The system took 1121 votes from these particular groups, an increase on 2010 and with fewer polling places

    Combatting electoral traces: the Dutch tempest discussion and beyond

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    In the Dutch e-voting debate, the crucial issue leading to the abandonment of all electronic voting machines was compromising radiation, or tempest. Other countries, however, do not seem to be bothered by this risk. In this paper, we use actor-network theory to analyse the socio-technical origins of the Dutch tempest issue in e-voting, and its consequences for e-voting beyond the Netherlands. We introduce the term electoral traces to denote any physical, digital or social evidence of a voter's choices in an election. From this perspective, we provide guidelines for risk analysis as well as an overview of countermeasures

    Back to practice, a decade of research in E-government

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    E-government is a multidisciplinary field of research based initially on empirical insights from practice. Efforts to theoretically found the field have opened perspectives from multiple research domains. The goal of this chapter is to review evolution of the e-government field from an institutional and an academic point of view. Our position is that e-government is an emergent multidisciplinary field of research in which focus on practice is a prominent characteristic. Each chapter of the book is then briefly presented and is positioned according to a vision of the e-government domain of research.E-government, Case study, E-administration, Public domain

    ANALYZING STRUCTURED TEXT ENTITIES USING A CITIZEN ORIENTED APPLICATION

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    The concept of citizen oriented informatics application is presented in the context of the knowledge society. The differences between these applications and the traditional applications are highlighted. The diversity of problems the citizens has lead to a high diversity of application structures that is described in the paper. Usual applications are taken into discussion and comments are made on their citizen orientation. Quality standards for informatics applications are described. An application for the analysis of the structured entities is presented. The methods that were used to orientate it towards the citizens are described. The procedure for the score computing is described. The performance of the application measured by automatic means is analyzed. Performance improvements are discussed. Future work directions and improvements are discussed.citizen oriented applications, knowledge, analysis, structured text entities

    Reve\{a,i\}ling the risks: a phenomenology of information security

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    In information security research, perceived security usually has a negative meaning, when it is used in contrast to actual security. From a phenomenological perspective, however, perceived security is all we have. In this paper, we develop a phenomenological account of information security, where we distinguish between revealed and reveiled security instead. Linking these notions with the concepts of confidence and trust, we are able to give a phenomenological explanation of the electronic voting controversy in the Netherlands
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