Abstract:
A facility for conducting a coercion-resistant electronic collection is described. The facility receives from the voter a first voter conformation value. At a later time, the facility receives from the voter an encrypted ballot and a second voter confirmation value. Without regard for the value of the received second voter confirmation value, the facility adds the received ballot to a publicly-available list of cast ballots. After the addition, members of the public are able to verify the addition of the received ballot to the list without being able to determine whether the ballot will be counted. The facility counts the ballot if and only the second voter confirmation value received with the ballot matches the received first voter confirmation value.

Description:
TECHNICAL FIELD  
         [0001]    This application is directed to the technical field of security measures for electronically-conducted elections.  
         BACKGROUND  
         [0002]    Various electronic and/or digital election protocols exist that provide cryptographic privacy to voters. With many of these election protocols, the voter needs to keep certain types of information secret. An example of such secret information is a voter&#39;s private key. These existing election protocols can be problematic, however, if a person threatens, or entices a voter (e.g., financially) to give up the secret information. When this type of coercion occurs, it is possible for the person to either know how the voter voted, or vote on his or her behalf.  
           [0003]    Similar problems arise with the use of absentee vote-by-mail systems. For example, a husband might force his wife to vote a certain way. The threat of coercion intensifies in a networked world, where people can “look over each other&#39;s shoulders” from thousands of miles away. This threat is serious enough that it is often considered a reason to not allow remote electronic voting.  
           [0004]    Under threat models that do not include coercion, the notion of a universally verifiable election is fundamental. In the past, it has been considered important that a “computing device based” election scheme be universally verifiable in order to be considered deployable on a wide scale. During elections of this type, transcripts are published that include the final tally. Under reasonable assumptions about the safety of keys, and the intractability of some computational problems, these transcripts cannot be feasibly forged by any collection of malicious agents. Although it would be desirable to carry this property over to election schemes under the threat of coercion, this may be difficult. Election schemes under the threat of coercion lack certain very basic properties, which have generally been taken for granted in the election protocol literature, and hence may not be practical in a large-scale implementation. 
       
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS  
       [0005]    [0005]FIG. 1 is a block diagram showing a suitable environment for implementing the scheme.  
         [0006]    [0006]FIG. 2 is a flow diagram showing steps typically performed in accordance with the scheme. 
     
    
     DESCRIPTION  
       [0007]    The scheme described herein allows the voter to remain in exclusive possession of secret information that is used by a voter to cast a ballot. It allows a voter that has been pushed to reveal secret information to provide a false answer without being discovered. After providing the false answer, the voter can then proceed and cast a “real” vote on his or her own. This is achieved while still maintaining a collection of election audit properties that are characteristic of good electronic election protocols. An election scheme is coercion safe if, even in the coercion threat model, its transcript can not be feasibly forged by any collusion of authorities that, together, are unable to compute a tally. Further, in the case of a collusion that is able to compute a tally, the extent of the forgery is limited by the number of voters coerced.  
         [0008]    At a summary level, the invention works as follows:  
         [0009]    1. Voters participate in a secret “voter registration” process in prior to the start of the election. This process must make the voter safe from coercion by standard physical means. In practice, this means the voter must report to a county registration center, where physical privacy is guaranteed. However, the voter need only participate in this registration process once. Thereafter, the method of this invention will protect the voter against coercion through the course of multiple elections.  
         [0010]    2. During the registration process, each voter selects a secret “confirmation code,” or “confirmation pass phrase.” 
         [0011]    3. The “confirmation pass phrase” is encrypted by the voter and the encrypted form is publicly registered to that voter.  
         [0012]    4. In order to cast a ballot, each voter must supply an accompanying (encrypted) pass phrase. The accompanying pass phrase does not have any effect on whether the ballot is “accepted” or not—so if the voter is being “supervised” by a coercer, the voter is still free to supply any pass phrase whether it matches the voter&#39;s registered pass phrase or not. The coercer will not be able to tell the difference. However, the accompanying pass phrase will have an effect on whether the ballot it accompanies is counted or not. The mechanism for this (described next) nevertheless assures that  
         [0013]    (a) Anyone, including the coercer, can inspect the ballot box contents and the tally to determine whether the tally is accurate or not (i.e. the election is Universally Verifiable).  
         [0014]    (b) In spite of the full availability of election data, the encryption and count mechanisms ensure that the coercer will still not be able to determine what vote, if any cast by the voter is actually included in the count.  
         [0015]    5. The tabulation (counting) of encrypted votes is accomplished roughly by randomly mixing voted ballot—encrypted pass phrase pairs as well as the original registration data. After randomization, the appropriate data is decrypted by election authorities holding shares of the encryption key. Only when a match between a pass phrase in the randomized ballot data matches a pass phrase in the randomized registration data is the ballot counted. The matching is done without ever decrypting either of the pass phrases. Since all the randomization is done by way of a cryptographic verifiable shuffle, the results can still be inspected and verified by anyone for accuracy.  
         [0016]    [0016]FIG. 1 and the following discussion provide a brief, general description of a suitable computing environment in which aspects of the invention can be implemented. Although not required, aspects and embodiments of the invention will be described in the general context of computer-executable instructions, such as routines executed by a general-purpose computer, e.g., a server or personal computer. Those skilled in the relevant art will appreciate that the invention can be practiced with other computer system configurations, including Internet appliances, hand-held devices, wearable computers, cellular or mobile phones, multi-processor systems, microprocessor-based or programmable consumer electronics, set-top boxes, network PCs, mini-computers, mainframe computers and the like. The invention can be embodied in a special purpose computer or data processor that is specifically programmed, configured or constructed to perform one or more of the computer-executable instructions explained in detail below. Indeed, the term “computer”, as used generally herein, refers to any of the above devices, as well as any data processor.  
         [0017]    The invention can also be practiced in distributed computing environments, where tasks or modules are performed by remote processing devices, which are linked through a communications network, such as a Local Area Network (“LAN”), Wide Area Network (“WAN”) or the Internet. In a distributed computing environment, program modules or sub-routines may be located in both local and remote memory storage devices. Aspects of the invention described below may be stored or distributed on computer-readable media, including magnetic and optically readable and removable computer discs, stored as firmware in chips (e.g., EEPROM chips), as well as distributed electronically over the Internet or over other networks (including wireless networks). Those skilled in the relevant art will recognize that portions of the invention may reside on a server computer, while corresponding portions reside on a client computer. Data structures and transmission of data particular to aspects of the invention are also encompassed within the scope of the invention.  
         [0018]    Referring to FIG. 1, one embodiment of the invention employs a computer  100 , such as a personal computer or workstation, having one or more processors  101  coupled to one or more user input devices  102  and data storage devices  104 . The computer is also coupled to at least one output device such as a display device  106  and one or more optional additional output devices  108  (e.g., printer, plotter, speakers, tactile or olfactory output devices, etc.). The computer may be coupled to external computers, such as via an optional network connection  110 , a wireless transceiver  112 , or both.  
         [0019]    The input devices  102  may include a keyboard and/or a pointing device such as a mouse. Other input devices are possible such as a microphone, joystick, pen, game pad, scanner, digital camera, video camera, and the like. The data storage devices  104  may include any type of computer-readable media that can store data accessible by the computer  100 , such as magnetic hard and floppy disk drives, optical disk drives, magnetic cassettes, tape drives, flash memory cards, digital video disks (DVDs), Bernoulli cartridges, RAMs, ROMs, smart cards, etc. Indeed, any medium for storing or transmitting computer-readable instructions and data may be employed, including a connection port to a network such as a local area network (LAN), wide area network (WAN) or the Internet (not shown in FIG. 1). Aspects of the invention may also be practiced in a variety of other computing environments.  
         [0020]    [0020]FIG. 2 is a flow diagram showing steps typically performed in accordance with the scheme. These steps are described in more detail below. In step  201 , voters are registered to add them to the list of registered voters eligible to cast votes, and to provide them with voting credentials. In step  202 , the election is initialized to assign ballot choice values to candidates. In step  203 , voters cast their votes by submitting encrypted ballots. In step  204 , the votes cast in step  203  are tabulated, and added to the vote total only if the validity of the received ballot can be verified. After step  204 , these steps conclude.  
       1 Coercion Implications of Partitionable Tabulation  
       [0021]    The purpose of this section is to  
         [0022]    1. Characterize a class of election schemes that includes the vast majority of schemes previously studied, and also seems likely to include all schemes that are “practical” for large scale, public elections.  
         [0023]    2. Establish some bounds on what can be achieved by schemes in this class under the coercion threat model.  
         [0024]    Definition 1 Henceforth, we call any participant in the election process, or any individual who exerts, or attempts to exert, an influence on the election process a player. Thus voters, election officials, and tabulators are all players, but so are all individuals who seek to influence the election outcome even though they may have no official role in it.  
         [0025]    Definition 2 Player P 1  coerces player P 2  if P 1  obtains from P 2  any information that the election protocol does not require P 2  to reveal to P 1 . Identical terminology is used when the coercer is actually a group of players. That is, no aspects of the invention limit its utility to the case were the coercer is a single individual. Therefore, henceforth, we will not endevor to make an explicit distinction between coercion by an individual and coercion by a group of individuals acting together.  
         [0026]    Definition 3 Coercible information is all information whose authenticity can be “verified” by the coercer. If the authenticity can not be verified, then the voter (or individual being coerced) is free to lie about it to the coercer.  
         [0027]    Definition 4 Recall that a tally is a function t: C→N=Z + ∪{0}, where Γ={c 1 , . . . , c l } is the “candidate slate”. We write  
            t        =       ∑     i   =   1     l                     t        (     c   i     )                               
 
         [0028]    The invention requires something roughly like digital ballot box. At very least, this is a storage device connected to a network, or otherwise openly accessible to voters. A standard web server and database application provides an embodiment of such a device. In practice, more security measures would be built into, or around this device in order to protect against damage or destruction caused by either malicious or natural forces. The invention also requires that voters be able to translate their choices into a digital representation, and further encrypt that representation by the methods presented in the remainder of this invention. A generic PC provides an embodiment of such a device.  
         [0029]    Definition 5 Since the transmission and storage of information are the key elements of this invention rather than the particular technologies that facilitate transmission and storage, we will adopt the more generic term bulletin board to denote the openly accessible storage device, and we denote the act of recording information on (or in) the bulletin board as posting. (In the voting context, this corresponds, intuitively, to the act of “casting a ballot”.) Further, we denote the strings, or records of information that are posted to the bulletin board as posts. (In the voting context, these correspond, intuitively, to voted ballots.)  
         [0030]    Let us now consider a set of very general properties that characterize a broad class of election protocols. The properties are considered in the absence of coercion. That is, in verifying a given property with respect to a particular protocol, we consider all potential protocol executions where the only information exchanged between players is that which is specified by the protocol. (We number these properties sequentially as PP-1, PP-2, etc.)  
         [0031]    PP-1. Posts are always appended to the bulletin board, BB, that is, deletions are not allowed. And posting is an atomic transaction, that is, at any given time, BB will contain exactly k posts, for some non-negative integer k.  
         [0032]    PP-2. Any player may append a post regardless of the state (contents) of BB.  
         [0033]    PP-3. At any given time, a tally can be formed, and it is unique. That is, it is not possible (or at least “overwhelmingly improbable”), that BB is in some state, C(BB) that is “invalid” for tabulation, and the tally, tally(C(BB)) : C→N is well defined.  
         [0034]    PP-4.A collection of players either can or cannot compute the tally independent of the state of BB.  
         [0035]    Recall that the voter role, O, is essentially a public list of players (eligible voters), {v 1 , . . . , v k }. Also, we use C(BB) to denote the contents of BB at an arbitrary time, that is, the sequence of posts p 1 , . . . , P t . Let P be the the set of all players in the protocol, so O␣P.  
         [0036]    For simplicity of presentation, we assume that the ballot consists of one issue, that the candidate slate, r, is given by {c 1 , . . . , c l }, and that each voter is allowed to choose (vote for) “at most one” candidate. Generalizing this setting to one that includes more general ballot types (that do not include “write-ins”) is fairly straightforward.  
         [0037]    Definition 6 Let C=C(BB) be any state of BB (sequence of posts). If p is a post, we denote by C⊕p the state of BB after appending the single post p. We also use the notation t C  to denote the tally, tally(C).  
         [0038]    Definition 7 A vote function (on BB) is a map  
         X: P×C(BB)→{0,1} Γ   (1)  
         [0039]    characterized by the following  
         [0040]    vf-1. For all p∈P  
         |X(p, C(BB))|∈{0,1}  (2)  
         [0041]    vf-2. For all C(BB), if p∉O, then (with “overwhelming probability”)  
         X(p, C(BB))=0   (3)  
         [0042]    Intuitively, this says that the protocol “only allows members of the voter role (eligible voters) to vote”.  
         [0043]    vf-3. For all p∈P, if p posts p, then the following holds (with “overwhelming probability”) for all q∈P,  
                 χ        (       q   ,                C        (   BB   )         ⊕   ρ     )       -     χ        (     q   ,                C        (   BB   )         )         =     {               t       C        (   BB   )       ⊕   ρ       -       t       C        (   BB   )                         if                 q       =   p                 0                 if                 q     ≠   p                     (   4   )                               
 
         [0044]    Intuitively, this says that the protocol “only allows a voter to vote on his own behalf”. It rules out schemes that allow multiple voters to combine their votes into one or more posts.  
         [0045]    vf-4. For all 1≦i≦1, and all 1≦j≦k, if |X(v i , C(BB))|=0, then v i  can compute (with probability  1  ) a post p such that  
                   t       C        (   BB   )       ⊕   ρ            (   π   )       -       t     C        (   BB   )              (   π   )         =     {             1                 if                 π     =   j                 0                 if                 π     ≠   j                     (   5   )                               
 
         [0046]    Intuitively, this simply says that if v i  has “not yet voted”, then vi can append a “vote” for any candidate. However, the statement does not preclude the possibility that the protocol may allow v i  to “cast a vote” and then later “change it”. (Nevertheless, the majority of protocols in the literature, which essentially allow each voter “one and only one chance to vote”, do satisfy this criteria.)  
         [0047]    vf-5. For all 1≦i≦1, if |X(v i , C(BB))|=1, then v i  can with at most negligible probability compute a post p satisfying  
         |t C(BB)⊕p |&gt;|t C(BB)|   (6)  
         [0048]    Intuitively, this simply says that no voter may “vote more than once”. Again, however, the statement does not preclude the possibility that the protocol may allow a voter to “change a vote” or to “retract a vote”. (As before, the majority of protocols in the literature satisfy this criteria.)  
         [0049]    Let A ij  be the event that vi computes a post, p, satisfying  
         t C(BB)⊕ (c j )−t C(BB)  (c j )=−1  (7)  
         [0050]    Let B ij  be the event that X(v i , C(BB)) (c j )=1.  
         [0051]    vf-6. There is a constant, α (0≦α≦1) such that, for all 1≦i≦1, and all 1≦j≦k, the conditional probability, P(A ij |B ij ) satisfies  
         P(A ij |B ij )=α  (8)  
         [0052]    independent of the values of i, j, and the state of the bulletin board, C(BB).  
         [0053]    Intuitively, this says that if the protocol allows “a voter to change a vote at some time” then the protocol allows “any voter to change a vote at any time”. However, it does not preclude the protocol from forbidding vote changes, which is more common in the literature.  
         [0054]    vf-7. For all 1≦i≦l, and all 1≦j≠η≦k, the conditional probability, P(A ij |B iη ) satisfies  
         P(A ij |B iη )≦∈  (9)  
         [0055]    where ∈≧0 is negligible.  
         [0056]    Intuitively, this says that the protocol only allows “a voter to reduce the count for a candidate” if “that voter has voted for that candidate”. Again, this does not preclude the protocol from forbidding vote changes.  
         [0057]    PP-5. The protocol admits a vote function. (Note that this does not require that the vote function be computable by any of the players, only that it exist.)  
         [0058]    Definition 8 An election protocol is said to have partitionable tabulation if and only if it satisfies PP-1-PP-5. For brevity, we will also use the term partitionable election protocol to describe any election protocol has partitionable tabulation.  
         [0059]    Theorem 1 If an election protocol has partitionable tabulation, and a coercer contains a collection of players capable of computing a tally, then for any 1≦i≦l, the value of X(v i , C(BB)) is coercible.  
         [0060]    Proof: (Sketch) The coercer can step through the sequence of ballot box images, at each point computing the tally (see assumption PP-4) and requiring v i  to “add a vote” of a particular value. By re-computing the tally with v i &#39;s post appended, the coercer can determine which posts were added by v i  and their cumulative effect on the tally.  
         [0061]    Note that this presumes a model in which “after the fact” coercion is allowed. That is, the coercer may interact with the voter after the bulletin board has been closed. However, this assumption can be eliminated with a reasonable assumption on the computing power of voters. In particular, we can show that the coercer is able, by way of a single coercion event, to  
         [0062]    1. Impersonate the voter during the course of the election—thereby “adding any chosen vote to the bulletin board (ballot box)”, and consequently forging “part” of the election transcript.  
         [0063]    2. Detect any attempts by the voter to independently change the vote.  
         [0064]    Definition 9 A partitionable election protocol is coercion resistant if, under the assumption that there is no coercer capable of independently computing a tally:  
         [0065]    CS-1. If p∈P and v i ∈O, v i ≠p, then p cannot compute X(v i , C(BB)) with probability higher than “random guess +∈”.  
         [0066]    CS-2. The election results are publicly verifiable.  
         [0067]    Definition 10 A partitionable election protocol is coercion safe if, it is coercion resistant and, under all collusion scenarios,  
         [0068]    CS-3. If t I  is the “ideal tally”, then verification of the election guarantees  
         |t C(BB) −t I |≦M  (10)  
       2 A Coercion Safe Election Protocol  
       [0069]    We assume the standard ElGamal cryptographic setting: p and q are large primes with q|p−1. A subgroup generator, g∈Z p   *  with |g|=q, and h=g s  with s shared by a (t, n) threshold scheme among n tabulation authorities, A 1 , . . . , A n .  
         [0070]    The protocol we next describe is coercion resistant. We will later describe how it can be easily augmented to give a coercion safe protocol. The advantage of describing the weaker version first is that most of the difficulty lies in its construction.  
       2.1 Registration  
       [0071]    Recall that we assume voters are safe from coercion during their registration session. Care must still be taken to assure that information exchanged during registration is not coercible afterwards.  
         [0072]    We denote the voter by v i .  
         [0073]    R-1. v i  chooses a random α i ∈{g}, and a random α i ∈Z q , and forms  
         (U i0 , W i0 )=(g B     ij   ,h α     i   r i )   (11)  
         [0074]    R-2. For each 1≦j≦n  
         [0075]    R-2.1. v i  obtains from Aj the pair (U ij , W ij ) given by  
         (U ij , W ij )=(g B     ij   , h B     ij   )   (12)  
         [0076]    where B ij ∈(g) is chosen randomly by A j .  
         [0077]    R-2.2. v i  and A j  execute an interactive Chaum-Pedersen proof of validity for the relation log g  U ij =log h  W ij . That is, the challenge is generated randomly by v i  rather than via a hash function (Fiat-Shamir heuristic). This allows v i  to later produce simulated proofs in the face of coercion.  
         [0078]    R-3. After checking each Chaum-Pedersen proof, v i  computes  
                 (       U   i     ,                W   i       )     =     (       ∏     μ   =   0     n                       U     i                 μ       ,                  ∏     μ   =   0     n                     W     i                 μ             )                          (   13   )                               
 
         [0079]    R-4. For each 1≦j≦n, v i  obtains a signature on (U i , W i ) from A j  as a receipt.  
         [0080]    R-5. (Ui, Wi) is added to the voter roll, O. When the registration period ends, each authority should sign O.  
         [0081]    Remark 1 As long as v i  knows that one specific authority, A J , is not a coercer, and fewer than t authorities (the number necessary to compute a tally) are colluding to coerce (though v i  may not explicitly know their identities), the value of r i  is not coercible. This is because v i  can justify the validity of any r i  and α i  by lying to the coercer about the value of (U iJ , V iJ ) and presenting a forged (i.e. simulated) Chaum-Pedersen proof.  
         [0082]    The requirement that v i  knows a specific honest AJ may be relaxed if we assume that it is acceptable for v i  to be caught lying to the coercer. Alternatively, if n&gt;&gt;t, then v i  can pick an J at random, 1≦J≦n, assume that A j  is honest, and then know that the chance of being caught lying is at most (t−1)/n.  
       2.2 Election Initialization  
       [0083]    EI-1. For each 1≦j≦n, and for each 1≦i≦l=|O|, authority A j  generates randomly and independently a pair of elements in (g), (ξ ij , η ij ). The quantities  
               (       ξ   i     ,                η   i       )     =     (       ∏     j   =   1     n                       ξ   ij     ,                  ∏     j   =   1     n                     η   ij           )             (   14   )                               
 
         [0084]    are publicly computed. These are all published (and signed).  
         [0085]    EI-2. The ballot choices γ μ ∈(g), 1≦μ≦k=|Γ|, are assigned by some public random process, or by sharing. (The value γ μ  will indicate a vote for candidate c μ )  
       2.3 Voting  
       [0086]    V-1. v i  chooses random v i1 ∈Z q  and encrypts her vote as the ElGamal pair  
         (A i , B i )=(g v     il   , g v     i1   γ(i))   (15)  
         [0087]    V-2. v i  then chooses random V i2 ∈Z q , computes s i =r i /γ(i) and encrypts it as  
         (C i , D i )=(g V     i2   , h v     i2   s i )   (16)  
         [0088]    V-3. v i  then constructs non-interactive proofs of knowledge, Q i   AB  and Q i   CD , for the pairs (A i , B i ) and (C i , D i ) respectively. These proofs show that the pairs are of the required form, and that v i  knows the values of s i  and γ(i).  
         [0089]    V-4. v i  submits the encrypted voted ballot  
         E i =((A i , B i ) , (C i , D i ), Q i   AB , Q i   CD )   (17)  
         [0090]    V-5. Though not necessary in the “append only” bulletin board model, in practice, v i  would be issued a receipt for E i .  
       2.4 Tabulation  
       [0091]    In this section, we assume a subset of t authorities has been fixed. Without loss of generality, we may assume these are A 1 , . . . , A t .  
         [0092]    T-1. For each 1≦i≦l, the quantities  
         ({overscore (U)} i , {overscore (W)} i )=(ξ i U i , Γ i W i )   (18)  
         [0093]    are publicly computed.  
         [0094]    T-2. The authorities execute a verifiable shuffle of the sequence of pairs of ElGamal pairs, ({overscore (U)} i , {overscore (W)} i ), (ξ i , η i ), resulting in output set of pairs of ElGamal pairs  
         {(Φ i , Ψ i ), ({overscore (ξ)} i , {overscore (η)} i )} i=1   t   (19)  
         [0095]    where Φ i , Ψ i , {overscore (ξ)} i , {overscore (η)} i ∈(g). The properties of this mix are that the set of decrypted value pairs, (a i , b i ) of the output sequence are exactly the same as the set of decrypted value pairs of the input sequence, but in randomly permuted order. Executing such a verifiable shuffle is discussed in greater detail in U.S. Patent Application No. 09/816,869, entitled “VERIFIABLE, SECRET SHUFFLES OF ENCRYPTED DATA, SUCH AS ELGAMAL ENCRYPTED DATA FOR SECURE MULTI-AUTHORITY ELECTIONS,” filed Mar. 24, 2001, and PCT Application No. WO02/77929, entitled “VERIFIABLE SECRET SHUFFLES AND THEIR APPLICATION TO ELECTRONIC VOTING,” filed Mar. 25, 2002, each of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.  
         [0096]    T-3. Let {((A m , B m ), (C m , D m ))} m=1   M  be the set resulting from all voted ballots with verified validity proofs. The authorities execute another verifiable shuffle of the sequence of these M ElGamal pair pairs, with resulting output set  
         {(({overscore (A)} m , {overscore (B)} m ) , ({overscore (C)} m , {overscore (D)} m ))} m=1   M    (20)  
         [0097]    T-4. For each 1≦m≦M, the l ElGamal pairs  
         (Θ mi , Ω mi )=({overscore (A)} m {overscore (C)} m {overscore (ξ)} m Φ i   −1 , {overscore (B)} m {overscore (D)} m {overscore (η)} i Ψ i   −1 )   (21)  
         [0098]    1≦i≦l are publicly computed.  
         [0099]    T-5. The authorities jointly decrypt all of the pairs ({overscore (A)} m , {overscore (B)} m ), and (Θ mi , Ω mi ), 1≦i≦l≦m≦M. Let these be, respectively, α m , and x mi .  
         [0100]    T-6. For each 1≦m≦M, α m  is added to the tally if and only if  
         [0101]    T-6.1. α m ∈{μ 1 , . . . , μ k } 
         [0102]    T-6.2. For some 1≦i≦l, x mi =1.  
       2.5 Tabulation—Alternate Embodiment  
       [0103]    In this section, we assume a subset of t authorities has been fixed. Without loss of generality, we may assume these are A 1 , . . . , A t .  
         [0104]    T2-1. For each 1≦i≦l, the quantities  
         ({overscore (U)} i , {overscore (W)} i )=(ξ i U i , η i W i )   (22)  
         [0105]    are publicly computed.  
         [0106]    T2-2. The authorities execute a verifiable shuffle of the sequence of ElGamal pairs, ({overscore (U)} i , {overscore (W)} e ), resulting in output set of ElGamal pairs  
         {(Φ i , Ψ i )} i=1   l   (23)  
         [0107]    where Φ i , Ψ i ∈(g). The properties of this mix are that the set of decrypted values of the output sequence are exactly the same as the set of decrypted values of the input sequence, but in randomly permuted order.  
         [0108]    T2-3. For each voted ballot, E m , 1≦m≦M, with verified validity proofs, the l ElGamal pairs  
         (Θ mi , Ω mi )=(A m C m Φ i , B m D m Ψ i )   (24)  
         [0109]    are publicly computed.  
         [0110]    T2-4. The authorities execute a verifiable shuffle of the sequence of M×l ElGamal pair pairs, ((A m , B m ), (θ mi , Ω mi )), resulting in the output set  
         {(({overscore (A)} m , {overscore (B)} m ), ({overscore (Θ)} mi , {overscore (Ω)} mi ))} m = 1 , i 
         [0111]    [0111] 32   1   m=M, i=l   (25)  
         [0112]    T2-5. The authorities jointly decrypt all of the pairs (Φ i , Ψ i ), ({overscore (A)} m , {overscore (B)} m ), and ({overscore (Θ)} mi , {overscore (Ω)} mi ) Let these be, respectively, ¥ i , α m , and x mi .  
         [0113]    T2-6. For each 1≦m≦M, α m  is added to the tally if and only if  
         [0114]    T2-7. α m ∈{μ 1 , . . . , μ k } 
         [0115]    T2-8. For some 1≦i≦l and 1≦j≦l, x mi =¥ j .  
       2.6 Making the Protocol Coercion Safe  
       [0116]    The protocol, as presented is clearly not coercion safe. If t or more authorities collude, they can decrypt the original voter secrets, r i , and this allows them to impersonate all the voters. The problem can be fixed by adding an anonymous signature requirement to the ballot casting operation. (See aforementioned patent applications for a detailed description of an anonymous signature protocol that is “authority free”.) In this case, even if a malicious agent has access to a secret, r i , it can not affect the tally without the corresponding private signing key, which can not be obtained without coercion. The reason for this should be clear. An authority free, anonymous signature on the voted ballot prevents the authorities (even in collusion) from linking the original encrypted ballot (input to the verifiable shuffle, or mix) to an individual the way they can with a standard digital signature. A standard digital signature explicitly links signed data to a registered individual. An anonymous signature only links signed data to a member of a set, or group, of individuals.