Public Evidence from Secret Ballots
- Matthew Bernhard ,
- Josh Benaloh ,
- J. Alex Halderman ,
- Ronald L. Rivest ,
- Peter Y. A. Ryan ,
- Philip B. Stark ,
- Vanessa Teague ,
- Poorvi L. Vora ,
- Dan S. Wallach
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Elections seem simple—aren’t they just about counting? But they have a unique, challenging combination of security and privacy requirements. The stakes are high; the context is adversarial; the electorate needs to be convinced that the results are correct; and the secrecy of the ballot must be ensured. They also have practical constraints: time is of the essence, and voting systems need to be affordable and maintainable, as well as usable by voters, election officials, and pollworkers. It is thus not surprising that voting is a rich research area spanning theory, applied cryptography, practical systems analysis, usable security, and statistics. Election integrity involves two key concepts: convincing evidence that outcomes are correct and privacy, which amounts to convincing assurance that there is no evidence about how any given person voted. These are obviously in tension. We examine how current systems walk this tightrope.