Travelling Ballot Based Protocol: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "This example protocol implements the task of Quantum Electronic Voting| Quantum E-voting. The protocol uses two entangled qudits, one as a blank ballot that travels from vot...") |
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 06:31, 10 February 2021
This example protocol implements the task of [[Quantum Electronic Voting| Quantum E-voting. The protocol uses two entangled qudits, one as a blank ballot that travels from voter to voter and the second one for computing the election result. The first quantum scheme in this category was introduced by Vaccaro and later improved.
Assumptions
Outline
We consider N voters who wish to cast their vote secretly. The election authority prepares an entangled state, keeps one of the qudits, and passes the other one as the ballot qudit. Each voter receives the ballot qudit from the previous voter, casts her vote by applying a unitary and then forwards the qudit to the next voter. In the end, the authority obtains the election outcome by measuring the two qudits.
Notations
- voter
- c: number of possible candidates
- N: number of voters
- vote of voter
- T: election authority
- m: number of yes votes
Requirements
- Quantum channel for qudit communication
- Qudit Measurement Device for election authority
- Quantum memory to store qudits
Properties
This type of protocol is subject to double voting and privacy attacks when several voters are colluding.
- Double voting: A corrupted voter can apply the “yes” unitary operation many times without being detected.
- Privacy attack: An adversary that corrupts voters Failed to parse (syntax error): {\displaystyle V_{k−1}} and can learn how voter voted with probability 1.