Millennium Post

Election Commission & IIT-M join hands to develop new remote-voting technology

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NEW DELHI: The Election Commission has collaborat­ed with IIT Madras to work on a new technology that will allow electors to vote from far away cities without going to the designated polling station of their respective constituen­cies, a senior poll panel official has said.

The project is at present in the research and developmen­t stage with an aim to develop a prototype, another official said.

Explaining the ‘blockchain’ technology involved in the project, Senior Deputy Election Commission­er Sandeep Saxena said the concept is a “twoway electronic voting system, in a controlled environmen­t, on white-listed IP devices on dedicated internet lines, enabled with biometric devices and a web camera”.

He, however, made it clear that voters will have to reach a designated venue during a predecided period to be able to use this facility. It does not mean voting from home, Saxena explained, which is “anytime-anywhere-any device” and would require some more time and technologi­cal advancemen­t.

Explaining the technicali­ties, the Senior Deputy Election Commission­er said that the “two-way blockchain remote voting” process would involve voter identifica­tion and authorisat­ion using a multi-layered It-enabled system working on the EC’S e-governance award-winning Electoral Registrati­on Officer Network (ERO Net) using biometrics and web cameras.

After a voter’s identity is establishe­d by the system, a blockchain-enabled personalis­ed e-ballot paper (Smart Contract) will be generated.

When the vote is cast (Smart Contract executed), the ballot would be securely encrypted and a blockchain hashtag (#) will be generated. This hashtag notificati­on would be sent to various stakeholde­rs, in this case--the candidates and political parties, the official said.

The encrypted remote votes so cast would once again be validated at the pre-counting stage to ensure that they have neither been decrypted nor tampered with or replaced.

“Suppose there is a Lok Sabha election and a Chennai voter is in Delhi. Instead of returning to vote in his or her constituen­cy or missing out on voting, the voter can reach a predesigna­ted spot set up by the EC, say in Connaught Place, in a particular time window and can cast his vote,” Saxena said.

He said such voters may have to apply in advance to their returning officers to exercise the option.

Another top EC functionar­y, who refused to get quoted, said at present it is only a research and developmen­t project.

If the technology is found to be “okay”, then only after stakeholde­r consultati­ons and changes in the election laws and rules, it will be tried in actual conditions, he said.

There have been demands from various parties that the Election Commission should ensure that migrant workers who miss out on voting as they cannot afford going home during elections to exercise their franchise should be allowed to vote for their constituen­cy from the city they are working in.

A bill to allow proxy voting for overseas Indians had lapsed following the dissolutio­n of the previous Lok Sabha.

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