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arxiv 2507.09453 v1 pith:BQXF2V7K submitted 2025-07-13 cs.CR cs.DC

SmartphoneDemocracy: Privacy-Preserving E-Voting on Decentralized Infrastructure using Novel European Identity

classification cs.CR cs.DC
keywords e-votingidentityprotocolcreatingdemocraticdigitaleuropeannovel
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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The digitization of democratic processes promises greater accessibility but presents challenges in terms of security, privacy, and verifiability. Existing electronic voting systems often rely on centralized architectures, creating single points of failure and forcing too much trust in authorities, which contradicts democratic principles. This research addresses the challenge of creating a secure, private e-voting system with minimized trust dependencies designed for the most versatile personal device: the smartphone. We introduce SmartphoneDemocracy, a novel e-voting protocol that combines three key technologies: the emerging European Digital Identity (EUDI) Wallet for Sybil-resistant identity verification, Zero-Knowledge Proofs for privacy-preserving validation, and a peer-to-peer blockchain (TrustChain) for a resilient, serverless public bulletin board. Our protocol enables voters to register and cast ballots anonymously and verifiably directly from their smartphones. We provide a detailed protocol design, a security analysis against a defined threat model, and a performance evaluation demonstrating that the computational and network overhead is feasible for medium- to large-scale elections. By developing and prototyping this system, we demonstrate a viable path to empower citizens with a trustworthy, accessible, and user-controlled digital voting experience.

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Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. TwoStepDemocracy: Prototyping of self-evolving, democratic, and decentralized systems

    cs.DC 2026-06 unverdicted novelty 4.0

    TwoStepDemocracy is a P2P prototype demonstrating technical feasibility of a coordination layer that separates demand, approval, and payment for democratic evolution of decentralized protocols.