DocumentCode :
2172917
Title :
Coercion-resistance and receipt-freeness in electronic voting
Author :
Delaune, Stéphanie ; Kremer, Steve ; Ryan, Mark
Author_Institution :
Lab. Specification et Verification, ENS Cachan
fYear :
0
fDate :
0-0 0
Lastpage :
42
Abstract :
In this paper we formally study important properties of electronic voting protocols. In particular we are interested in coercion-resistance and receipt-freeness. Intuitively, an election protocol is coercion-resistant if a voter A cannot prove to a potential coercer C that she voted in a particular way. We assume that A cooperates with C in an interactive fashion. Receipt-freeness is a weaker property, for which we assume that A and C cannot interact during the protocol: to break receipt-freeness, A later provides evidence (the receipt) of how she voted. While receipt-freeness can be expressed using observational equivalence from the applied pi calculus, we need to introduce a new relation to capture coercion-resistance. Our formalization of coercion-resistance and receipt-freeness are quite different. Nevertheless, we show in accordance with intuition that coercion-resistance implies receipt-freeness, which implies privacy, the basic anonymity property of voting protocols, as defined in previous work. Finally we illustrate the definitions on a simplified version of the Lee et al. voting protocol
Keywords :
data privacy; government data processing; protocols; anonymity property; coercion-resistance; election protocol; electronic voting protocols; pi calculus; receipt-freeness; Calculus; Computer science; Concurrent computing; Electronic voting; Large-scale systems; Natural languages; Nominations and elections; Privacy; Protocols; Research and development;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Computer Security Foundations Workshop, 2006. 19th IEEE
Conference_Location :
Venice
ISSN :
1063-6900
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2615-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CSFW.2006.8
Filename :
1648706
Link To Document :
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