Litcius/Paper detail

Investigating Usability and User Experience of Individually Verifiable Internet Voting Schemes

Karola Marky, Marie-Laure Zollinger, Peter B. Roenne, Peter Y. A. Ryan, Tim Grube, Kai Kunze

2021ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Internet voting can afford more inclusive and inexpensive elections. The flip side is that the integrity of the election can be compromised by adversarial attacks and malfunctioning voting infrastructure. Individual verifiability aims to protect against such risks by letting voters verify that their votes are correctly registered in the electronic ballot box. Therefore, voters need to carry out additional tasks making human factors crucial for security. In this article, we establish a categorization of individually verifiable Internet voting schemes based on voter interactions. For each category in our proposed categorization, we evaluate a voting scheme in a user study with a total of 100 participants. In our study, we assessed usability, user experience, trust, and further qualitative data to gain deeper insights into voting schemes. Based on our results, we conclude with recommendations for developers and policymakers to inform the choices and design of individually verifiable Internet voting schemes.

Topics & Concepts

BallotUsabilityComputer scienceVerifiable secret sharingElectronic votingVotingComputer securityCategorizationThe InternetInternet privacyCardinal voting systemsWorld Wide WebHuman–computer interactionArtificial intelligencePolitical scienceProgramming languageLawPoliticsSet (abstract data type)Internet Traffic Analysis and Secure E-votingPrivacy, Security, and Data ProtectionUser Authentication and Security Systems