DocumentCode
321846
Title
Sensus: a security-conscious electronic polling system for the Internet
Author
Cranor, Lorrie Faith ; Cytron, Ron K.
Author_Institution
Public Policy Res., AT&T Labs. Res., USA
Volume
3
fYear
1997
fDate
7-10 Jan 1997
Firstpage
561
Abstract
Presents the design and implementation of Sensus, a practical, secure and private system for polling (conducting surveys and elections) over computer networks. Expanding on the work of Fujioka, Okamoto and Ohta (1993), Sensus uses blind signatures to ensure that only registered voters can vote and that each registered voter only votes once, while at the same time maintaining voters´ privacy. Sensus allows voters to verify independently that their votes were counted correctly and to anonymously challenge the results should their votes be miscounted. We outline seven desirable properties of voting systems and show that Sensus satisfies these properties well, in some cases better than traditional voting systems
Keywords
Internet; data privacy; public administration; security of data; Internet; Sensus; anonymous challenge; blind signatures; computer networks; elections; miscounting; private system; registered voters; security-conscious electronic polling system; surveys; vote counting verification; voter privacy; Computer networks; Computer science; Electronic voting; Internet; Nominations and elections; Postal services; Privacy; Protocols; Public policy; Security;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
System Sciences, 1997, Proceedings of the Thirtieth Hawaii International Conference on
Conference_Location
Wailea, HI
ISSN
1060-3425
Print_ISBN
0-8186-7743-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HICSS.1997.661700
Filename
661700
Link To Document