From: Sayeed Rahman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mar 21, 2007 9:17 AM
Subject: Estonia set for world's first Internet election & National ID Card
EXPERIENCE

Check more info on Estonia National ID Card *EXPERIENCE*

http://www.id.ee/file.php?id=122

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*Estonia set for world's first Internet election*
Wed Feb 21, 2007 10:58AM EST

By David Mardiste

TALLINN (Reuters) - The Baltic state of Estonia plans to become the world's
first country to allow voting in a national parliamentary election via the
Internet next month -- with a little help from the forest king.

E-voting will be introduced for a parliamentary election on March 4, for the
first time after it was used in more limited local elections in 2005. It is
a fresh sign of Estonia's strong embrace of technology since it quit the
Soviet Union in 1991.

The e-voting system was tested earlier this week, including the chance to
choose the "king of the forest". Voters could pick an animal from 10
candidates, including moose, deer and boars.

"It is hard to say how many people could vote (via the Internet), but 3,925
people used the system over the last week, when we used different testing
scenarios to vote for the king of the forest," said Arne Koitmae of the
electoral commission.

Estonia rushed to modernise after independence, and has become a major
European base for Internet telephony group Skype: Estonians helped develop
the service, owned by ebay Inc.

Just under 10,000 people voted via the Internet in local elections in
October 2005. Computer specialists have estimated 20,000-40,000 of 940,000
registered voters will vote via the Internet from February 26-28, ahead of
the March 4 election day.

"I will be voting in these elections via Internet, it is a good system and I
think my grandfather, who is over 80, will be doing the same as well, he
already calls me on Skype," said Toomas Talts, a technology worker, as he
tested the system.

The voting will take place by people putting their state-issued ID card,
which has an electronic chip on it, into a reader attached to a computer and
then entering two passwords.

Pollsters expect the current two main coalition parties, the centre-right
Reform Party and left-leaning Center Party, to win the vote, though it is
not clear which will be the biggest.

Reform leader Andrus Ansip is current prime minister, though the Center
Party has 21 parliament seats, two more than Reform, in the 101-seat house.
Third coalition member is the People's Union, with 12 seats.

USED TO THE INTERNET

The uptake of new information technology has come despite the fact Estonia,
though with a strongly growing economy, is one of the poorest nations in the
European Union. GDP per inhabitant in 2004 was at 57 percent of the bloc's
average.

Its infrastructure was decrepit after independence. Even today, outside the
glitzy new skyscrapers of Tallinn city center, buildings looked battered,
roads are potholed and Soviet-era trolley buses still whirr around town.

"One of the most common explanations as to why Estonians have taken to new
IT technology is that everything had to be done new here," said Jaan
Tallinn, a senior programmer involved in the development of Skype.

"There were no legacies to deal with, like with bank cheques, which were
already obsolete. So companies could create new systems and people just used
them," he added.

Despite modest economic means Estonian banks started to offer online banking
services in 1997, and every move by the private sector has been matched with
laws to support e-commerce and e-services such as access to government
information.

As in the Nordic states, Estonians can also use mobile phones to pay for car
parking, or buy bus tickets: scattered across the country are many wireless
Internet points.

"We are a very small country in the EU, therefore we have to be very careful
in spending our money on government infrastructure as it gives very little
back," said computer systems and security specialist Jaan Murumets.

The security angle of voting via the Internet has not raised many worries.
"E-voting is not so difficult to think about here. We are used to using the
Internet for business and for almost 10 years we have been using the
Internet for banking," he said.

But the winner of the "king of the forest" vote remained a mystery -- no
count was done as it was one of several tests.

"In the end, only the animals in the forest know," said election committee
official Koitmae.

(This is the first in a series of stories in the run-up to Estonia's
parliamentary election.)
Source: 
http://www.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUSL213415120070221?pageNumber=3



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Sayeed Rahman

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