Security Risks Can Persist With Blockchain Voting Systems, Says MIT

Security risks can persist in the internet and blockchain-based voting systems, a study by researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has found.

Blockchain-based voting systems were believed to be a relatively safer tool for conducting elections, immune to the risks associated with other methods

The MIT paper is titled “Going from Bad to Worse: From Internet Voting to Blockchain Voting”.

Security risks can persist in the internet and blockchain-based voting systems, a study by researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has found. 

In a time when manipulation of election results continues to make the news, with speculations about the interference of foreign countries in elections, booth capturing and tampering of electronic voting machines (EVMs), blockchain-based voting systems were believed to be a relatively safer tool for conducting elections, immune to the risks associated with other methods. 

The MIT paper is titled, “Going from Bad to Worse: From Internet Voting to Blockchain Voting”. 

The calls for blockchain-based voting grew stronger after media outlets in the US waited to announce the winner of the presidential poll until the Saturday following the election day.

“More importantly: given the current state of computer security, any turnout increase derived from the Internet or blockchain-based voting would come at the cost of losing meaningful assurance that votes have been counted as they were cast, and not undetectably altered or discarded,” the researchers wrote.

Blockchain technology is a structure that stores transactional records, also known as the block, of the public in several databases, known as the “chain,” in a network connected through peer-to-peer nodes. It is touted to be a more secure and transparent method of storing data and information.

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