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Securing Abstention in an Electronic Legislature
Big Island, Hawaii January 03-January 06
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/HICSS.2005.532Proceedings of the 38th Annual Hawaii ...
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Brian King, Indiana Univ. Purdue Univ. Indianapolis
Yvo Desmedt, University College London; Florida State Univ.
The reasons for developing an electronic legislature (e-legislature) include: an improved legislature, increasing the constituent's access to the legislator, improving participation in government and providing our goverment with a mobile distributed legislature that will be able to continue to meet even in the face of some drastic activity like terrorism. The essence of a legislature is political and consequently its members will certainly act in such a way. Thus one must assume that legislators would take advantage of the lack of physical presence in a legislature if it was not secured. In [IFIP TC6/TC11 Joint Working Conference on Communications and Multimedia Security (CMS'99)], [Verifiable democracy a protocol to secure an Perspectives] an electronic legislation scheme was proposed that secured the government from malicious behavior of legislators. The protocol described in [IFIP TC6/TC11 Joint Working Conference on Communications and Multimedia Security (CMS'99)], [Verifiable democracy a protocol to secure an Perspectives] provided only minimal legislative voting options, to create a realistic e-legislature one must support all likely functions. Most legislatures allow their members to abstain. The process of introducing abstention into an e-legislature can be formative especially in the case when the legislature passes statutes by simple majority. Here we discuss how to secure an e-legislature which supports abstention.
Citation:
Brian King, Yvo Desmedt, "Securing Abstention in an Electronic Legislature," hicss, vol. 5, pp.121a, Proceedings of the 38th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS'05) - Track 5, 2005
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