Technical aspects can be answered only by Tim Starling, I guess.
As for counting in human factors, once encrypted data are open by Election Official(s) and sumed up. I am engaging to examine the authentification of vote and not participating in counting precisely, and haven't asked Tim the secret key (one cannot release the information she doesn't know, so I don't want to know the data which I absolutely need to know), that is all what I can tell you.
Hoping it helps to solve your worrying,
Sincerely, Kizu Naoko, Wikimedia Election Committee 2006
On 9/24/06, Alison Wheeler wikimedia@alisonwheeler.com wrote:
I didn't want to ask this actually while voting was open in case anyone got worried, but not that voting has closed I'd like to ask something.
How are our votes actually counted and, more importantly, how can we each be certain that the votes we made are actually the ones which are being counted?
I ask this because of the issues raised in the USA about election fraud (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diebold#Security_Concerns etc.) and wondered whether the same could happen with us, After all, the voting isn't being carried out on independent servers it is on Wikimedia servers and, presumably, a lot of people have access to those who could do things without leaving a trace.
I am *not* meaning imply that anything has been done, but I would very much like to know what security voters like myself have that our votes have been correctly recorded and tallied.
Alison Wheeler _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@wikimedia.org http://mail.wikipedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l