1 / 11

The Current State of Electronic V oting In Korea and Japan

The Current State of Electronic V oting In Korea and Japan. Asiacrypt 2003 Rump Session. Kyushu Univ. JAPAN Yong-Sork HER, Kouichi SAKURAI. 1/11. The latest voting rat io < A general election>. Japan. Korea. Date : April 13, 2000 Voting rat io 57.2 %. Date : Nov. 9, 2002

Download Presentation

The Current State of Electronic V oting In Korea and Japan

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Current State of Electronic Voting In Korea and Japan Asiacrypt 2003 Rump Session Kyushu Univ. JAPAN Yong-Sork HER, Kouichi SAKURAI 1/11

  2. The latest voting ratio< A general election> Japan Korea Date : April 13, 2000 Voting ratio 57.2 % Date : Nov. 9, 2002 Voting ratio 59.86 % 2/11

  3. Electronic-Voting • To prevent the losses by the conventional voting system • Using Network and cryptography techniques • Automatic and fast voting procedure • Untill it is realized the home–voting, Convenient place-voting…. 3/11

  4. Korea The Automatic Counting • In thePresidential-Election of Korea • < Dec.,19, 2002> • Reduction of counting time for • opening ballot From The Chosun Ilbo 4/11

  5. Okayama on 23, June (2002) Niimi city : A mayoral and a municipal election Japan • General voter • Absentee voter • Touch panel method like ATM • (Automated-teller Machine) of BANK. 5/11

  6. Necessity • - Japan election law : • If an absentee voter died or the loss of the right of casting • the ballot before Election Day, the ballot becomes • an invalid ballot. News • An Amendment of Japan’s election law (4. June,2003) • Although an absentee voter died before election day, • the ballot is a valid ballot. Japan election law in Okayama election 6/11

  7. E-voting procedure Inputs the IC card in voting terminal Receive IC-card Authentication Voting Store the contents of voter 7/11

  8. Analysis of Japan‘s e-voting Items The existed voting 1994 (Paper-voting) The electronic Voting 2002 Voting officer (43-voting place) 180-person 178-person Counting officer 85-person 58-person Admission member (入会人) 13-person 13-person • Counting time • Major • Councilman 3 hours 4 hours 25 minutes 25 minutes 25 minutes • Invalid ballots • Major • Councilman 242 214 0 0 Voting ratio 92.06 % 86.82 % Election costs \11,630,000 \16,460,000 8/11

  9. Analysis of Japan ‘s e-voting(Cont.) Candidate Group The ratio of votes obtained E-voting < General voter> Existing voting <Absentee voter> Candidate 1 78.4 % 69.6 % Candidate 2 9 % 11.5 % Candidate 3 5 % 13.3 % Candidate 4 7.6 % 5.6 % Total 100% <14,966 persons> 100 % <1719 persons> 9/11

  10. Comparison of Korea and Japan In real election Reservation Voting Counting KOREA Paper Voting E-voting JAPAN E-voting Paper Voting 10/11

  11. I think The E-voting will be realized in the future. Conclusion 11/11

More Related