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Estonia opts for online voting, but how about the United States?

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Hanni said the system has proven to be very popular, and countries such as Tunisia and Ukraine – and recently the Palestinian Authority – have expressed an interest in adopting Estonia’s remote voting system as a model.

Jeffrey D. Levine, the U.S. ambassador to Estonia, said the European nation’s approach could benefit many countries, but not necessarily the United States.

“For the United States, voting online is very problematic because [of] our lack of national ID cards, lack of some of the prerequisites that Estonia has implemented,” Levine told The Associated Press.

In addition, there’s the “fear of big government,” Levine said. Americans, he said, “are afraid of the creation of a very large national database. We don’t have that yet, and there’s lot of resistance to it.”

When the District of Columbia experimented with an online voting system in 2010, hackers broke in and changed votes to fictional characters.

In 2005, Estonia became the first country to implement Internet voting in a nationwide election. Though it was slow to catch on, by 2011 approximately one-fourth of all votes in parliamentary elections were cast from homes or offices.

Other countries have tried online voting with mixed success.

Swiss voters have been able to vote over the Internet in some referendums since the federal government and some cantons (states) began experimenting with electronic ballots a decade ago, and this year 12 cantons were authorized to use online voting during federal elections in June.

Britain most recently tested Internet voting at municipal elections in 2007, but found that offering the public to switch the polling booth for a computer proved problematic.

Some voters found an electoral website hard to navigate, while others forgot logon details or passwords needed to cast their ballot. In the city of Sheffield, two-thirds of people who had registered for an electronic vote didn’t end up using the service.

Britain’s Electoral Commission, responsible for running elections, said there were major worries over hacker attacks and identity fraud.

Hanni said such worries “haven’t come true” in Estonia. “But naturally they are there,” she added. “Initiating Internet voting is a complex project. You need to build trust, solve constitutional issues and the secrecy of voting – it’s not an easy task.”

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