Abstract | ||
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Internet voting continues to raise interest both among research and society. Throughout the last decades, many Internet voting schemes have been developed, each one providing particular properties such as receipt-freeness or end-to-end verifiability. One attractive scheme is the JCJ / Civitas scheme due to its property of making coercion attacks ineffective. Neumann and Volkamer [NV12] analyzed the scheme and identified significant usability issues. To overcome these drawbacks, the authors extended the original work by integrating smart cards. In a follow-up work, Neumann et al. [NFVK13] conducted a theoretical performance analysis for this extension and improved the extension towards its applicability in real-world elections. Their analysis left several real-world considerations open for future work. The present work addresses these gaps: We present a prototype implementation of the revised extension and assess its real-world performance. Based on this contribution, we are able to conclude that the revised extension is feasible to be used in real-world elections. |
Year | Venue | Field |
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2014 | GI Jahrestagung | Computer security,Computer science,Usability,Smart card,Internet voting |
DocType | Citations | PageRank |
Conference | 0 | 0.34 |
References | Authors | |
10 | 3 |
Name | Order | Citations | PageRank |
---|---|---|---|
Christian Feier | 1 | 5 | 1.09 |
Stephan Neumann | 2 | 59 | 11.55 |
Melanie Volkamer | 3 | 414 | 75.40 |