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  2. Secret ballot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secret_ballot

    The secret ballot, also known as the Australian ballot, [1] is a voting method in which a voter's identity in an election or a referendum is anonymous. This forestalls attempts to influence the voter by intimidation, blackmailing, and potential vote buying. This system is one means of achieving the goal of political privacy.

  3. Open vote network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_vote_network

    It extends Hao and ZieliƄski's anonymous veto network protocol by allowing each participant to count the number of veto votes (i.e., input one in a boolean-OR function) while preserving the anonymity of those who have voted. The protocol can be generalized to support a wider range of inputs beyond just the binary values 0 and 1.

  4. End-to-end auditable voting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/End-to-end_auditable_voting

    End-to-end auditable or end-to-end voter verifiable (E2E) systems are voting systems with stringent integrity properties and strong tamper resistance.E2E systems use cryptographic techniques to provide voters with receipts that allow them to verify their votes were counted as cast, without revealing which candidates a voter supported to an external party.

  5. List of electoral systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_electoral_systems

    An electoral system (or voting system) is a set of rules that determine how elections and referendums are conducted and how their results are determined.. Some electoral systems elect a single winner (single candidate or option), while others elect multiple winners, such as members of parliament or boards of directors.

  6. ThreeBallot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ThreeBallot

    ThreeBallot is a voting protocol invented by Ron Rivest and Warren D. Smith in 2006. ThreeBallot is an end-to-end (E2E) auditable voting system that can in principle be implemented on paper. The goal in its design was to provide some of the benefits of a cryptographic voting system without using cryptographic keys.

  7. Exhaustive ballot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exhaustive_ballot

    The exhaustive ballot is a voting system used to elect a single winner. Under the exhaustive ballot the elector casts a single vote for his or her chosen candidate. However, if no candidate is supported by an overall majority of votes then the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated and a further round of voting occurs.

  8. Electronic voting in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_voting_in_the...

    The elections commission said the voting machines "incorrectly calculate vote totals". The election commission then "conducted a full vote tally and audited paper receipts from hundreds of ballot-counting machines." [35] Dominion said the errors were in their software which exports counts from the voting system for public release. [36]

  9. Symmetry (social choice) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symmetry_(social_choice)

    In economics and social choice, a function satisfies anonymity, neutrality, or symmetry if the rule does not discriminate between different participants ahead of time. For example, in an election, a voter-anonymous function is one where it does not matter who casts which vote, i.e. all voters' ballots are equal ahead of time.