
Students at a Maltese university studying as a blockbuster have launched a decentralized voting application. It will be used to select representatives of the student community.
The application is based on Vodafone's decentralized digital identification platform. Joshua Ellul, Director of the Distributed Registry Technology Centre at the University of Malta, stressed:
"We are delighted to be the first to use the Vodafone platform and we seem to be the first to have held a student election at a block circuit. It is very important to have a remote voting mechanism that allows the elections to be conducted in a trusted and transparent manner. Especially in the current situation".
The application allows the electorate to control the use of their data. Thanks to this, they do not need to communicate their data to any centralized organization. Elections are much more transparent, and students' choices are kept secret.
Recall that recently, Malta's financial regulator issued warnings against Coinmalex and Crypto Foxtrades, whose operators falsely claimed to have a license to work in the country.
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