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A generic architecture for e Government and e Democracy
Details
Is online electronic vote (e Voting), using Internet, secure enough? Could someone view or change my vote? If I pay my taxes online, could my financial information be compromised? How can I ensure that a hostile government does not commit fraud? Is it possible to design a generic, extensible, scalable, reusable and highly secure software architecture to develop an e Government system? Is the direct democracy through Internet (e Democracy) realistic? This book, the author s PhD thesis, tries to solve all these questions. Using UML, it proposes an architecture to implement any e Government, for any country at any level (local, national, supranational...), and with any political and administrative layout. It includes both administrative (eg: paying taxes) and decision-making procedures (eg: voting), and there are no paper-based traditional processes. This book also finds and catalogues all typical security problems in e Government and e Democracy, researching solutions for all of them. Finally, the author proposes a qualitative and quantitative analysis framework, in order to measure the probability and cost of solving a given problem, its probability of occurrence, and its impact.
Autorentext
He was born in Burgos (Spain) in 1979. He got his degree in Computer Science and Software Engineering, being granted with the best student national award. In 2010 he obtained his PhD in e-Government and e-Democracy with the highest mark. Now, he is an university professor and software project manager in Madrid. More details at www.carlosgrima.com
Klappentext
Is online electronic vote (e-Voting), using Internet, secure enough? Could someone view or change my vote? If I pay my taxes online, could my financial information be compromised? How can I ensure that a hostile government does not commit fraud? Is it possible to design a generic, extensible, scalable, reusable and highly secure software architecture to develop an e-Government system? Is the direct democracy through Internet (e-Democracy) realistic? This book, the author's PhD thesis, tries to solve all these questions. Using UML, it proposes an architecture to implement any e-Government, for any country at any level (local, national, supranational...), and with any political and administrative layout. It includes both administrative (eg: paying taxes) and decision-making procedures (eg: voting), and there are no paper-based traditional processes. This book also finds and catalogues all typical security problems in e-Government and e-Democracy, researching solutions for all of them. Finally, the author proposes a qualitative and quantitative analysis framework, in order to measure the probability and cost of solving a given problem, its probability of occurrence, and its impact.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09783848437627
- Sprache Englisch
- Auflage Aufl.
- Größe H16mm x B220mm x T150mm
- Jahr 2012
- EAN 9783848437627
- Format Kartonierter Einband (Kt)
- ISBN 978-3-8484-3762-7
- Titel A generic architecture for e Government and e Democracy
- Autor Carlos Grima-Izquierdo
- Untertitel Requirements, design and security risk analysis
- Gewicht 435g
- Herausgeber LAP Lambert Academic Publishing
- Anzahl Seiten 316
- Genre Informatik