Hongkongers get a voice with electronic voting platform
Universities join forces to develop an electronic platform for local people to express their views on pressing social and political issues
Hongkongers could turn their voices into votes on contentious issues following the completion of a new civil referendum platform next month.
And the city's political reform is most likely to be the first topic for an electronic ballot.
The Occupy Central campaign plans to run a small-scale voting exercise by the end of the year to draw up a list of "democratic principles" that the campaign would then pursue.
The PopVote project, jointly developed by the University of Hong Kong and Polytechnic University, could involve up to 800,000 votes in each exercise.
The developers say the new system is better equipped against online traffic jams and overseas malicious attacks than its predecessor, which was compromised by hackers in March last year.
Jazz Ma, an information technology manager at HKU's public opinion programme, said the HK$800,000 computer platform was at its final stage of testing.