88 \item The Australian parliament ruled in 2014 that e-voting is |
88 \item The Australian parliament ruled in 2014 that e-voting is |
89 highly vulnerable to hacking and will not use it any time |
89 highly vulnerable to hacking and will not use it any time |
90 soon. That is because it is still not as secret and |
90 soon. That is because it is still not as secret and |
91 secure as paper ballots, the parliamentary committee |
91 secure as paper ballots, the parliamentary committee |
92 in charge concluded. |
92 in charge concluded. |
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93 |
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94 \item Norway experimented with Internet voting, but their |
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95 interest fizzled away after some tries. Their idea was |
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96 to get Internet voting ``right'' --- it is a small, |
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97 prosperous and stable country, which can afford with |
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98 playing with new ways of exercising their democratic |
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99 voting rights. Well, e-voting is an incredibly difficult |
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100 problem, even in such favourable circumstances, as |
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101 explained in this video from the Chaos Computer Club |
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102 conference in 2014: |
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103 |
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104 \begin{center} |
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105 \url{https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KawZ3m_EeSU} |
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106 \end{center} |
93 |
107 |
94 \item India uses e-voting devices since at least 2003. They |
108 \item India uses e-voting devices since at least 2003. They |
95 use ``keep-it-simple'' machines produced by a |
109 use ``keep-it-simple'' machines produced by a |
96 government owned company. There was some trouble for |
110 government owned company. There was some trouble for |
97 an Indian researcher after he and an international |
111 an Indian researcher after he and an international |