> Date: Wed, 07 Apr 2004 15:42:47 -0400 > From: Ian Grigg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > It seems to me that the requirement for after-the-vote > verification ("to prove your vote was counted") clashes > rather directly with the requirement to protect voters > from coercion ("I can't prove I voted in a particular > way.") or other incentives-based attacks. > > You can have one, or the other, but not both, right?
What you can have is for the voter to be able to verify that his/her vote was properly counted without being able to prove it to anybody else. In that case, an individual claim that a vote was improperly counted wouldn't be convincing, but a wide enough outcry might trigger a recount. I think this would add unnecessary and undesired complexity to a political election voting system, though. Ray