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European online voting experiences Andreu Riera, PhD Chairman Scytl Online World Security S.A. DIMACS Voting Workshop Rutgers University 26-27 May 2004.

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Presentation on theme: "European online voting experiences Andreu Riera, PhD Chairman Scytl Online World Security S.A. DIMACS Voting Workshop Rutgers University 26-27 May 2004."— Presentation transcript:

1 European online voting experiences Andreu Riera, PhD Chairman Scytl Online World Security S.A. DIMACS Voting Workshop Rutgers University 26-27 May 2004

2 Contents About Scytl Scytl’s approach to Internet voting security Internet voting in Europe Example 1: The Swiss Canton of Neuchâtel Example 2: 2003 Elections to the Parliament of Catalonia Example 3: Madrid Participa Concluding remarks

3 Contents About Scytl Scytl’s approach to Internet voting security Internet voting in Europe Example 1: The Swiss Canton of Neuchâtel Example 2: 2003 Elections to the Parliament of Catalonia Example 3: Madrid Participa Concluding remarks

4 The origin of Scytl 1994: The academic research on e-voting cryptography was initiated at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, with the main goal to balance security and practical feasibility 1996: Completion of the PhD Thesis “Design and Development of a Cryptographic Scheme to Perform Secure Elections over a LAN” 1997: First Internet binding election in Europe (Presidency of the IEEE IT Spanish Chapter) 1999: Completion of the PhD Thesis “Design of Implementable Solutions for Large Scale Electronic Voting Schemes” 2001: Scytl Online World Security is spun-off from the research lab 2001 - 2003: The company receives support and acknowledgement from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology, the Catalan Government, the European Commission, … Scytl’s research team account for more than 20 international scientific publications on e-voting security 19942001200220042003

5 Contents About Scytl Scytl’s approach to Internet voting security Internet voting in Europe Example 1: The Swiss Canton of Neuchâtel Example 2: 2003 Elections to the Parliament of Catalonia Example 3: Madrid Participa Concluding remarks

6 Internet voting security Technical security measures Procedural Security measures Physical Security measures Auditing

7 What’s Pnyx? Pnyx is a patent-pending (priority date December 2001) security software for e-voting systems Pnyx implements a mixing-based application-level cryptographic protocol, in which the mix-net has been substituted by a cryptographic secret sharing scheme The main goal of Pnyx is to tunnel the vote casting procedure from the voter all the way to the members of the electoral board through all the technical systems and privileged personnel sitting in between (therefore addressing the “black box” issue) Pnyx supports different voter authentication mechanisms, but in any case it assumes an underlying PKI for the electoral roll Pnyx provides individual verifiability by voters, and auditability by third parties Next version of Pnyx addresses the “virus problem” in the client device (as denounced for example in the SERVE Security Report)

8 Pnyx protocol overview

9 Contents About Scytl Scytl’s approach to Internet voting security Internet voting in Europe Example 1: The Swiss Canton of Neuchâtel Example 2: 2003 Elections to the Parliament of Catalonia Example 3: Madrid Participa Concluding remarks

10 European approach to Internet voting The European Commission is working towards the implementation of Internet voting at the European level The Council of Europe is drafting a set of recommendations that will be issued to all Member States Some countries are actively testing Internet voting and/or have defined a complete roadmap to deploy Internet voting Some countries have run Internet voting experiences and are in the phase of defining an strategy to deploy Internet voting In general Internet voting is seen as a way –to modernize electoral processes –to try to increase voter turnout, and –to engage citizens in participatory activities

11 Contents About Scytl Scytl’s approach to Internet voting security Internet voting in Europe Example 1: The Swiss Canton of Neuchâtel Example 2: 2003 Elections to the Parliament of Catalonia Example 3: Madrid Participa Concluding remarks

12 Canton of Neuchâtel The perfect example of participatory democracy: –500 people out of almost 200.000 citizens can request a referendum –6/8 binding elections/referenda per year 90% of people vote by mail (the voting period lasts approximately one month –one single day in the case of poll-site voting–) Internet voting system fully integrated into the Canton’s e-government portal (Guichet Unique Sécurisé) One of the very few permanent and binding Internet voting systems in the World The project initiated in 2003 as a pilot Canton for the Swiss Federal Government, with the aim of complementing/substituing postal voting 20.000 electors in the first phase, who have to collect their voting credentials at their City Hall

13 Contents About Scytl Scytl’s approach to Internet voting security Internet voting in Europe Example 1: The Swiss Canton of Neuchâtel Example 2: 2003 Elections to the Parliament of Catalonia Example 3: Madrid Participa Concluding remarks

14 Generalitat de Catalunya (1) First Internet voting experience in Spain run in parallel to actual public elections Approved (for the first time) by the Central Electoral Commission 23.234 citizens were allowed to participate from Argentina, Belgium, Chile, USA and Mexico (“CERA” electoral roll) Voting allowed during three days: Opening: 10:00 November 14th 2003 Closing: 20:00 November 16th 2003 Voting kiosks were installed at several Casals Catalans, but also any computer connected to the Internet could be used to cast a vote The process was done in front of more than 20 national and international observers, along with several representatives from the Spanish Senate

15 Generalitat de Catalunya (2) The electorate was totally satisfied with the experience and demanded the introduction of binding Internet voting In the USA: almost 40% participation rate on real voter participation In Mexico: more than 220% of participation rate on real voter participation 563 surveys were filled by voters, with 216 free-text comments 97% expressed satisfaction with the experience 96% felt confident with the e-voting system 98% considered the e-voting process as easy to use 98% said they would had used the system to cast binding votes

16 Contents About Scytl Scytl’s approach to Internet voting security Internet voting in Europe Example 1: The Swiss Canton of Neuchâtel Example 2: 2003 Elections to the Parliament of Catalonia Example 3: Madrid Participa Concluding remarks

17 Madrid municipality (1) Up to date, the most significant e-participation project in Europe All citizens (regardless of their nationality) older than 16 of the central district of Madrid (totalling 120.000 persons) will be asked 3 questions about the municipal priorities for the district Multi channel: Internet, kiosks and mobile phones Official webpage: www.madridparticipa.orgwww.madridparticipa.org

18 Madrid municipality (2) Partners Dates May 21st June 14th June 28-30th July Presenting the project Starting the promotion Voting Introducing the preliminary report of the event

19 Contents About Scytl Scytl’s approach to Internet voting security Internet voting in Europe Example 1: The Swiss Canton of Neuchâtel Example 2: 2003 Elections to the Parliament of Catalonia Example 3: Madrid Participa Concluding remarks

20 Conclusions A number of successful Internet voting experiments have already taken place in several European countries The possibility of increasing democratic participation, and of achieving more efficiency in democracy, is taken very seriously; e-democracy is seen as an enabling tool The European Union, and every country (at its own pace) are working towards implementing Internet voting in elections and/or in consultations The leadership of the European Union could be a definitive step to join individual efforts and speed up the entire process A number of countries will deploy Internet voting –for certain segments of the electorate such as citizens living abroad– while poll-site voting will still be completely based on paper (no use of DREs at all) Security is a primary concern, but it is seen as something achievable E-participation could be the incontestable winner in the short term


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