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What is Coercion-Resistance

Handbook of Research on Social and Organizational Liabilities in Information Security
A property of electronic voting systems where a voter is not able to prove to a coercer what way he/she voted. This is an important property as it prevents voters being bought or blackmailed by those who intend to unlawfully influence the results of the election.
Published in Chapter:
Formal Analysis of Security in Interactive Systems
Antonio Cerone (United Nations University, China)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-132-2.ch025
Abstract
Reducing the likelihood of human error in the use of interactive systems is increasingly important. Human errors could not only hinder the correct use and operation, they can also compromise the safety and security of such systems. Hence the need for formal methods to analyze and verify the correctness of interactive systems, particularly with regards to human interaction. This chapter examines the use of formal modeling and analysis of security properties of interactive systems. The reader is introduced to some basic concepts in security and human-computer interaction, followed by formal modeling of human cognitive behavior and analysis of such systems. Authors highlight the use of model-checking to drive the system development to design secure user actions and sequences of actions. Authors also analyze the patterns of user behavior that may lead to security violation. Finally, particular areas of security protocol design where human interaction plays a key role are discussed.
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