Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Theory and practice of electronic governance
Remote Electronic Voting with Revocable Anonymity
ICISS '09 Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Information Systems Security
Lagrangian e-voting: verifiability on demand and strong privacy
TRUST'10 Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Trust and trustworthy computing
A practical and secure coercion-resistant scheme for internet voting
Towards Trustworthy Elections
Selections: internet voting with over-the-shoulder coercion-resistance
FC'11 Proceedings of the 15th international conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security
A new approach towards coercion-resistant remote e-voting in linear time
FC'11 Proceedings of the 15th international conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security
Cobra: toward concurrent ballot authorization for internet voting
EVT/WOTE'12 Proceedings of the 2012 international conference on Electronic Voting Technology/Workshop on Trustworthy Elections
Efficient vote authorization in coercion-resistant internet voting
VoteID'11 Proceedings of the Third international conference on E-Voting and Identity
Practical Internet voting system
Journal of Network and Computer Applications
Batch proofs of partial knowledge
ACNS'13 Proceedings of the 11th international conference on Applied Cryptography and Network Security
A practical coercion resistant voting scheme revisited
Vote-ID'13 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on E-Voting and Identity
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Remote electronic voting over the Internet is a promising concept to afford convenience to voters and to increase election turnouts. However, before employing electronic voting systems in regular elections, problems such as coercion and vote selling have to be solved. Recently, Juels, Catalano and Jakobsson introduced a strong security requirement that deals with theses concerns. Coercion resistance improves on the former security notion of receipt freeness by taking additional real-life threats into account. In this paper, we present a coercion-resistant election scheme with a linear work factor. The scheme is based on the previous proposal of Juels et al., which exhibited a quadratic work factor, and employs Smith's idea to achieve a speedup to linear work. It, however, overcomes the drawbacks of these preceding solutions. We also present an evaluation of the scheme and identify the drawbacks and the real world aspects related to the scheme.