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Vanja Malidžan Singidunum University, Belgrade
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INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society” Development of ICT Implementation of ICT in voting procedures
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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
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INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society” E-Voting PoliticalSocialLegalTechnical
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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
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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
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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
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INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society” Estonia internet voting since 2005 five election cycles Norway pilot projects in 2011 more than 50.000 online votes Switzerland tests in Geneva and Zurich cantons since 1998
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INFuture2011: “Information Sciences and e-Society” * surveys carried out in Spain, Mexico and Argentina
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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)*
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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)
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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
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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
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