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+\documentclass{article}
+\usepackage{../style}
+
+
+\begin{document}
+
+\section*{Handout 2 (E-Voting)}
+
+In security there are many counter-intuitive phenomena: for
+example I am happy (more or less) to use online banking every
+day, where if something goes wrong, I can potentially loose a
+lot of money, but I am staunchly against using electronic
+voting (lets call it e-voting for short). E-voting is an idea
+that is nowadays often promoted in order to counter low
+turnouts in elections\footnote{In my last local election where
+I was eligible to vote only 48\% of the population have cast
+their ballot. I was, I shamefully admit, one of the
+non-voters.} and generally sounds like a good idea. Right?
+Voting from the comfort of your own home, or on your mobile on
+the go, what could possibly go wrong? Even the UK's head of
+the Electoral Commission, Jenny Watson, argued in 2014 in a
+Guardian article that the UK should have e-voting. Her
+plausible argument is that 76\% of pensioners in the UK vote
+(in a general election?), but only 44\% of the under-25s. For
+which constituency politicians might therefore make more
+favourable (short-term) decisions is clear. So being not yet
+pensioner, I should be in favour of e-voting, no?
+
+Well, it turns out there are many things that can go wrong
+with e-voting, as I like to argue in this handout. E-voting in
+a ``secure way'' seems to be one of the things in computer
+science that are still very much unsolved. It is not on the
+scale of Turing's halting problem, which is proved that it can
+never be solved in general, but it is unsolved with current
+technology. This is not just my opinion, but
+from shared by Alex Alderman, who is the world-expert on this
+subject and from whose course on Securing Digital Democracy
+I have most of my information and inspiration. It is also
+a controversial topic in many countries:
+
+\begin{itemize}
+\item The Netherlands between 1997--2006 had electronic voting
+ machines, but ``hacktivists'' had found they can be
+ hacked and also emitted radio signals revealing how you
+ voted.
+
+\item Germany had used them in pilot studies, but in 2007 a
+ law suit has reached the highest court and it rejected
+ electronic voting on the grounds of not being
+ understandable by the general public.
+
+\item UK used optical scan voting systems in a few trail
+ polls, but to my knowledge does not use any e-voting in
+ elections.
+
+\item The US used mechanical machines since the 1930s, later
+ punch cards, now DREs and optical scan voting machines.
+
+\item Estonia used since 2007 the Internet for national
+ elections. There were earlier pilot studies for voting
+ via Internet in other countries.
+
+\item India uses e-voting devices since at least 2003. They
+ used ``keep-it-simple'' machines produced by a
+ government owned company.
+
+\item South Africa used software for its tallying in the 1993
+ elections (when Nelson Mandela was elected)
+ and found that the tallying software was
+ rigged, but they were able to tally manually.
+\end{itemize}
+
+
+The reason that e-voting is such a hard problem is that we
+have requirements about the voting process that conflict with
+each other. The five main requirements are:
+
+\begin{itemize}
+\item {\bf Integrity}
+ \begin{itemize}
+ \item The outcome of the vote matches with the voters'
+ intend.
+ \item There might be gigantic sums at stake and need to be defended against.
+ \end{itemize}
+\item {\bf Ballot Secrecy}
+ \begin{itemize}
+ \item Nobody can find out how you voted.
+ \item (Stronger) Even if you try, you cannot prove how you voted.
+ \end{itemize}
+\item {\bf Voter Authentication}
+ \begin{itemize}
+ \item Only authorised voters can vote up to the permitted number of votes.
+ \end{itemize}
+\item {\bf Enfranchisement}
+ \begin{itemize}
+ \item Authorised voters should have the opportunity to vote.
+ \end{itemize}
+\item {\bf Availability}
+ \begin{itemize}
+ \item The voting system should accept all authorised votes and produce results in a timely manner.
+ \end{itemize}
+\end{itemize}
+
+To tackle the problem of e-voting, we must first have a look
+into the history of voting and how paper-based ballots
+evolved. We know for sure that elections were held in Athens
+as early as 600 BC, but might even date to the time of
+Mesopotamia and also in India some kind of ``republics'' might
+have existed before the Alexander the Great invaded it.
+Have a look at Wikipedia about the history of democracy for
+more information.
+
+
+
+\subsubsection*{Questions}
+
+Coming back to the question of why I use online banking, but
+prefer not to e-vote.
+
+Why do I use e-polling in lectures?
+
+\end{document}
+
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