Petition updateStop Wireless Smart Meters on the Campus of Maharishi University of ManagementCongressional Research Service , Smart Meter Data and Private Security
The People of Fairfield & MUMFairfield, IA, United States
Nov 23, 2017
Summary
Fueled by stimulus funding in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA),
electric utilities have accelerated their deployment of smart meters to millions of homes across the United States with help from the Department of Energy’s Smart Grid Investment Grant
program. As the meters multiply, so do issues concerning the privacy and security of the data collected by the new technology. This Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) promises to
increase energy efficiency, bolster electric power grid reliability, and facilitate demand response,among other benefits. However, to fulfill these ends, smart meters must record near-real time data
on consumer electricity usage and transmit the data to utilities over great distances via
communications networks that serve the smart grid. Detailed electricity usage data offers a
window into the lives of people inside of a home by revealing what individual appliances they are
using, and the transmission of the data potentially subjects this information to interception or theft
by unauthorized third parties or hackers.
Unforeseen consequences under federal law may result from the installation of smart meters and
the communications technologies that accompany them. This report examines federal privacy and
cybersecurity laws that may apply to consumer data collected by residential smart meters. It
begins with an examination of the constitutional provisions in the Fourth Amendment that may
apply to the data. As we progress into the 21st century, access to personal data, including
information generated from smart meters, is a new frontier for police investigations.
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