Privacy alert: Will dummies buy the fed's "smart meter" line?

Gotcha! Through smart metering, utilities and the feds will widen their nets. (Photo: McKay Savage/Flickr CC)

The word “privacy” appears not once, in a 1,500-word request for public comment on the smart grid, released by the White House this week.

That’s because your individual privacy is the obstacle that the government, aided by the utility companies, hopes to overcome with so-called smart meters — devices that will reveal precisely how you are using the electricity you paid for.

Research into the smart grid, which includes the use of smart meters, has been paid for by hundreds of millions of your tax dollars.

So far, the only discernible benefits of the smart meters will go to the utility companies and government investigators. (No potential savings for consumers have been demonstrated.)

One question from the Office of Science and Technology does glance on the privacy issue:

“Who owns the home energy usage data? Should individual consumers and their authorized third-party service providers have the right to access energy usage data directly from the meter?”

Obviously, individual consumers own the juice they pay for, not the utilities. Therefore, they should own the data on where it goes on their property, be it to their electric heaters or marijuana grow bulbs.

But if the government was truly concerned about individual privacy, the same question would read:

“Should individual consumers *OR* their authorized third-party service providers have the right to access energy usage data directly from the meter?”

I believe the question is not written that way because the utility companies — just like the phone companies and ISPs — are not on the consumer’s side. Rather, they have a track record of collaborating with the authorities in their investigations of “suspicious behavior,” which typically means using a lot of electricity.

via Consumer Interface With the Smart Grid (at Cryptome)

Cyberspies Penetrate U.S. Power Grid, Leave Software That Could Disrupt System – Presidential Politics | Political News – FOXNews.com

Photo: CC/Ian Muttoo

Photo: CC/Ian Muttoo

This shock story, generated by HomeSec — that baddies are trying to disrupt the country’s power grids  — turns out not to be such a shocker, after all.

The U.S. has uncovered evidence that cyberspies, most likely from China and Russia, have penetrated the U.S. power grid and left behind software that could be activated to disrupt American infrastructure, FOX News confirmed Wednesday.

via Cyberspies Penetrate U.S. Power Grid, Leave Software That Could Disrupt System – Presidential Politics | Political News – FOXNews.com.

Now, Time reports that cyber terrorists could only take down a section of the nation’s power supply at a time.

Of course, that”s not going to stop the government from plowing billions into  so-called smart-grid infrastructures (with built-in surveillance technologies that will  mind each of us on the grid).

As we continue to discover, as technologies (think RFID and GPS, for example) grow smarter, the risks they pose to privacy also increase.

Living "off the grid": will state utilities allow it?

One of you guys wrote in recently to ask about the whole “smart grid” thing, asking me to investigate just what state-licensed utilities will demand to know about what we’re doing on our property with their juice. (Opening the question, too, whether the state at any point considers our electricity to be our own.) I’m working on that one… stand by for an update within the next 24 hours.

Meanwhile, some of my grandfather’s countrymen are conducting a large scale experiment in self-reliance, at the community level, that is.

more about “Islands of self-sufficiency < Banking…“, posted with vodpod