Vanja Malidžan Singidunum University, Belgrade. INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society”  Development of ICT  Implementation of ICT in voting.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Electronic Voting Systems
Advertisements

Can e-democracy improve participation?. What is E-democracy Synonyms- tele-democracy, direct democracy, digital democracy, e- governance, e-participation,
Online Voting System State Election Commission, Gujarat
Online Voting Presented By: George Oham George Olajide
Good or Bad?.  One of the closest contests in US history  Florida was the pivotal state  Neither Democrat Al Gore nor Republican George W. Bush had.
ICT IN THE ELECTORAL PROCESS: LESSONS LEARNED Susanne Caarls International Electoral Affairs Symposium May 2012.
The "Electronic Voting: a challenge to democracy?" event E-Voting in the Netherlands The Approaching End of Black Box Voting Dr. Anne-Marie Oostveen.
The Future of Electronic Counting and Tabulation Systems Worldwide Dr. Ljupcho Antovski IEAS 2011 Dr. Ljupcho Antovski.
Self-Enforcing E-Voting (SEEV) Feng Hao Newcastle University, UK CryptoForma’13, Egham.
Observation of e-enabled elections Jonathan Stonestreet Council of Europe Workshop Oslo, March 2010.
Kickoff Meeting „E-Voting Seminar“
A Model Linking Criteria for Best Practice Concerning eDemocracy Suree Funilkul/ Wannida Soontreerutana/ Gerti Orthofer/ Helene Gieber/ Roland Traunmüller.
Voting Naked: A Feasible Election System or Just a Recurring Nightmare Presented by: Danita McRae Daniel Bramell.
Internet Voting. What is Internet Voting? Internet voting is: an election process whereby people can cast their votes over the Internet, most likely through.
Ballot Processing Systems February, 2005 Submission to OASIS EML TC and True Vote Maryland by David RR Webber.
Informatics Online Voting Opportunities and Risks STOA Workshop at the European Parliament Brussels, 17 March 2011 Prof. Dr. Rüdiger Grimm IT Risk Management.
Author: Michał Rajkowski Tutor: prof. dr hab. inż. Zbigniew Kotulski.
Internet voting in Estonia Epp Maaten Councillor of the Elections Department Chancellery of the Riigikogu.
Poverty & Human Capability 101 Introductory Class.
Citizen participation using electronic voting for decision making processes Presentation at ESF TED Workshop Helsinki, May, 20th 2004 Robert Krimmer University.
Electronic Voting Ronald L. Rivest MIT Laboratory for Computer Science.
1 The Evolution of Internet Voting By Ka Ling Cheung.
Elections in the Digital Age 4 th International Electoral Affairs Conference Professor Rachel K. Gibson (University of Manchester)
Countries of Europe France Spain Italy Germany Which country is this?
VOTING BEHAVIOR. What do you think about this t-shirt? Do you agree with the message?
Political Participation An Introduction. Voting Rates Voting-Age Population Austria89% Sweden87 Australia83 Germany81 France78 UK76 Japan74 Canada67 USA53.
Cross-national attitudinal research
SEMINAR TOPIC ON GLOBAL WIRELESS E-VOTING
Cross-national attitudinal research The International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) and European Social Survey (ESS)
Andreas Steffen, , LinuxTag2009.ppt 1 LinuxTag 2009 Berlin Verifiable E-Voting with Open Source Prof. Dr. Andreas Steffen Hochschule für Technik.
Nathanael Paul CRyptography Applications Bistro February 3, 2004.
Securing Digital Democracy Carsten Schürmann, DemTech, IT University of Copenhagen.
Strasbourg – How to create trust-1 © G. Skagestein November 2006 How to create trust in electronic voting over an untrusted platform A possible solution.
Online voting: a legal perspective
The Digital Divide, Internet Development and Pricing Session 2: Internet pricing and access Sam Paltridge, OECD.
International Crime Victim Survey International Crime Business Survey Anna Alvazzi del Frate UNODC/PARB/RAS.
Topic 3: ARE CITIZENS IN BRITAIN DISENGAGED FROM THE POLITICAL SYSTEM?
Retirement in Europe Annika Sundén Presentation at 16th Annual Meeting of the Retirement Research Consortium “Social Security and the Retirement Income.
Focus Groups Experiences with Prêt à Voter Steve Schneider, University of Surrey 3 September 2010 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the TexPoint manual.
Political Process 3.6 Politics and Government. E- voting Electronic voting systems for electorates have been in use since the 1960s when punched card.
E-voting Bringing the voting process to the technology age.
CONCEPTS | NIGERIA APPRAISAL | CHALLENGES | ROAD AHEAD Essential IT Infrastructure Plan for a Sustainable e-Voting Process in Nigeria.
< Return to Largest Religious CommunitiesLargest Religious Communities The Largest Atheist / Agnostic Populations Top 50 Countries With Highest Proportion.
Sociology: Your Compass for a New World Robert J. Brym and John Lie Wadsworth Group/Thomson Learning © 2003.
Electronic Voting: Danger and Opportunity
VOTING BEHAVIOR. What do you think about this t-shirt? Do you agree with the message?
The European Law Students’ Association Albania ˙ Austria ˙ Azerbaijan ˙ Belgium ˙ Bosnia and Herzegovina ˙ Bulgaria ˙ Croatia ˙ Cyprus ˙ Czech Republic.
Computer and Network Security Brendan Duncombe Bahein Maung.
7 th Grade Civics Miss Smith *pgs  Must be ___ years old by a set ____ before the next ________  Voter _________ protects your vote  No one.
E-Government, E-Voting, and the Future Jordan Weiler.
New Technologies in Elections International Standards and IFES’ Role in Implementation Beata Martin-Rozumilowicz, E&E Director 14 April 2016.
Carlos Navarro April 2016 Use of Electronic Voting Devices An Overview of the Latin American Situation.
What is electronic voting An electronic voting (e-voting) system is a voting system in which the election data is recorded, stored and processed primarily.
Government Online a national perspective NOVEMBER, 2002 TNS CONSULTANTS: W MELLOR, V PARR ANNUAL COUNTRY REPORT Australia, Canada, Czech Republic, Denmark,
USD billion
Voter Turnout Why do people vote and does it make a difference?
Presentation on Electoral Reform for Town Hall Meetings Member of Parliament: Riding: Location: DATE:
Internet Voting Past, Present, Future Scytl June 29, 2016.
EVoting 23 October 2006.
Six Sigma Total Error Percent Process Sigma 1,000, ,000 10% 2.78
Ronald L. Rivest MIT Laboratory for Computer Science
Electronic Voting Machine Using MSP430 With Voice Feedback System
Electronic voting – safe or not?
Improving Reliability of Direct Recording Electronic Voting Systems
Uruguay West Germany Brazil Argentina Brazil July 30, 1930
Slide Deck 4B: Electoral Participation Research
Labour Market Flexibility and Decent Work
2006 Rank Adjusted for Purchasing Power
Slide Deck 7B: Electoral Participation Research
Includes data from the Welsh Cancer Intelligence and Surveillance Unit
Presentation transcript:

Vanja Malidžan Singidunum University, Belgrade

INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society”  Development of ICT  Implementation of ICT in voting procedures

INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society”  Usage of some electronic means in some or all voting procedures  Types of E-Voting:  Direct Recording Electronic (DRE)  Internet Voting

INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society” E-Voting PoliticalSocialLegalTechnical

INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society”  easier and more accessible  appealing to young people  greater secrecy  no geographical and time constraints  universal verifiability  no ‘point of no return’  faster tallying  less invalid ballots  less expensive

INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society”  technophobia  importance of elections for local community  loss of the civic ritual  digital divide  frauds, bribery and coercion  hacker created problems

INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society”  Netherlands  privacy problems  Germany  electronic machines contradicts the public nature of elections  Ireland  cost and the public's dissatisfaction

INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society”  Estonia  internet voting since 2005  five election cycles  Norway  pilot projects in 2011  more than online votes  Switzerland  tests in Geneva and Zurich cantons since 1998

INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society” * surveys carried out in Spain, Mexico and Argentina

INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society” YesNeutralNo Trust in security (against fraud and hackers)60%17%23% Trust in secrecy (privacy)5%11%84% Trust in accountability (verify the vote)62%16%22% TruE-Vote is easy to use92%4% TruE-Vote is fast77%13%10% TruE-Vote is easy to install65%15%20% TruE-Vote is robust (not vulnerable for pincode/pincard loss)52%21%27% * surveys carried out in France, England, Italy and Finland Opinions about usability of the remote voting system (Oostveen, 2007)*

INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society”  Internet voting does not automatically increase turnout  70% of online voters were 45 and older  digital divide  NO in terms of education and gender  YES in terms of age and ICT competence Elections Canada survey data (Goodman et al., 2010)

INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society”  Trust in political system  Switzerland, Gerlach and Gasser, 2009  Young voters constantly at 10%  Voters above 55 at 18%  Estonia, National Election Commission

INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society”  Politics (still) rely on interpersonal relations => can not be (easily) be transferred to cyberspace  Trust in political system is precondition for trust in electronic voting system  E-voting can attract all age groups of voters