Partner Article
New electronic voting system for future elections invented
A new secure electronic voting system has been designed by a team of mathematicians from Université Paris-Saclay’s University of Versailles, Inpher, Gemalto and CEA LIST.
The new protocol could be used in elections across the globe.
Inspired by existing e-voting systems, the researchers present a simple and transparent scheme that easily confirms the correctness of the final election result, guarantees privacy and allows verifiability.
The scheme follows the essential components for an e-voting protocol; no one should be able to retrieve the vote of a particular user, each voter should be able to verify that their vote was included, and the final vote count should correspond with the sum of all the legitimate votes. Their system also publicly detects any attempt to cheat.
“Designing security for electronic based systems is much more intricate that traditional paper-based systems,” Ilaria Chillotti, from Université Paris-Saclay. “Until now, all designs were based on assumptions that could be compromised by advanced quantum computers. Our design is the first step to achieving a quantum resistant e-voting scheme.
“Our scheme differs from existing e-voting protocols that have been used for medium-scale elections by changing the underlying design with a lattice-based fully homomorphic encryption design.”
Fully homomorphic encryption allows computations to be carried out on encrypted information.
The paper was published in Post-Quantum Cryptography 2016, part of the Lecture Notes in Computer Science book series.
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Université Paris-Saclay .
OpenAI decision a wake-up call for our tech plans
Understanding the new Employment Rights Act
Why global conflict is a cyber risk for UK SMEs
Improving safety and standards in construction
From economic engine to community ecosystem
Improving North East transport will improve lives
Unlocking investment potential before year end
Give us certainty to deliver better homes
Hormuz: Safe passage - not insurance - the issue
Don't get caught out by employment law change
When literacy thrives, our businesses thrive too
Building a more diverse construction sector