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Australian Smart Meter Data Shared Far and Wide

New submitter ferrisoxide.com writes "In Victoria (Australia), detailed information about electricity customers' power usage, which gives insights into when a house is occupied, is being shared with third parties including mail houses, debt collectors, data processing analysts and government agencies."

16 of 172 comments (clear)

  1. Color me surprised. by MyLongNickName · · Score: 5, Funny

    Color me surprised. I also expect campaign promises to be kept.

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    1. Re:Color me surprised. by Tastecicles · · Score: 3, Informative

      the Principality of Sealand, I think he means. This is a manmade structure 7nm off the coast of Suffolk which has been privately occupied pretty much since it was abandoned by the British military (it was originally an early warning station and anti-aircraft platform).

      --
      Operation Guillotine is in effect.
  2. Lovely by tqft · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Data security is such a good thing. Good thing the hackers didn't get it.

    And with the data retention proposals of course no isp is going to be tempted to defray the cost with either on-site or outsourced datamining. And all storage is onsite and under their control.

    From the FTA
    "An Origin spokesman said the portal was fully compliant with Australian privacy legislation. He said the additional information requested about each household ''adds to the richness of the Origin Smart experience''.

    Customer information can only be accessed by staff involved in billing. He said the electricity retailer only shared information with third parties when they had a ''legitimate business need to do so in order to meet our service obligations to our customers''."

    "with third parties" the easiest way for the NSA to get all the data in the world would be to sell cheap datamining services as the Narly Stats Advisers.

    And government and business wonder why people don't trust them.

    --
    The Singularity is closer than you think
    Quant
    1. Re:Lovely by HeadlessNotAHorseman · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It might actually be illegal. In a nutshell, the Privacy Act requires that all personal information must be kept appropriately secure. If a company sends personal information to a third party, it requires the company to ensure that they keep the information secure too (e.g. by having a clause in the contract requiring them to meet the requirements of the Privacy Act). It is not possible to provide personal information to a USA company and still meet the requirements of the Privacy Act, because the USA's Patriot Act allows the US government to gain access to that information (without even informing the information owner).

      --
      I like my coffee the way I like my women - roasted and ground up into little tiny pieces.
  3. Re:Information not the problem by 0123456 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The question isn't whether or not information can or should be collected, but how it's used.

    Information that isn't collected can't be abused.

  4. We Are The Government - It's the Law. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Resistance is V/I.

  5. Re:Information not the problem by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    An Origin spokesman said the portal was fully compliant with Australian privacy legislation. He said the additional information requested about each household ''adds to the richness of the Origin Smart experience''.

    Legislation that isn't specific essentially ensures that data will be misused.
    Then again, to the people who passed the law, that was probably a feature, not a bug.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  6. You bloody fucking idiots! by onyxruby · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You took a perfectly good cause and ruined it in the name of profit!!!! You have just fed the tinfoil hat crown and ruined smart meters world wide for years to come.

    Let's think about this? Hey spouse, want to get a new smart meter? Hell no, I do that and the government will spy on me, the debt collectors will use it against me, do I look like I was born yesterday?

    No one is going to want one of these things attached to their house now knowing how they have actually been used. Why the hell couldn't you leave well enough alone and use it for what it was actually meant for?

    Smart meter technology could have been one of the greatest real world technological green technologies we have seen in a long time. Instead some short sighted, can't see the next week because tomorrow is in the way greedy bastards ruined it to sell their customers out to debt collectors!

    Words cannot begin to describe how short sided and idiotic these people were. I'm sorry they just can't.

    I've spent a fair amount of time in Melbourne, I thought well of the people down there. What the hell happened?

  7. Re:So how do I... by nadaou · · Score: 4, Funny

    So how do I get myself taken off these lists?

    Send an email to support@slashdot.com with the word "UNSUBSCRIBE" somewhere in the body.

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  8. Re:where is this info? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 3, Funny

    Don't be daft, you can't have the information. Data protection and all that.

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    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  9. 1984... by BoRegardless · · Score: 3, Insightful

    is here!

  10. Re:Shocked by Dr+Max · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Info does = money and that is exactly why people put up smart meters. Most business have a peak demand charge when they buy bulk electricity, smart metering lets the customer know when and what causes that, so it can be minimized and greatly minimise his bill. It's also useful to the average joe consumer who wants to export power back to the grid. Maybe some one else that wants to buy power at the cheap off peak rate and store it in a battery bank for when the price is high. It allows for all kinds of different billing methods that can greatly reward taking stress of the network when it needs it. Smart metering is all about saving money by knowing what the network is doing. Everything you mentioned already exists, smart tv's that record the shows it thinks you'll like so you don't have to, smart browsers that remember your history have been around since the internet started, and smart shoes have been brought out by Nike for exercises freaks. Knowledge is power for all who embrace it. That said I most defiantly can not condone what Origin is doing with the customer's data, and can only assure you that they are the only retailer doing this. Choose the other guys (it's completely up to the customer) and they have very strict rules in place about who gets access. Origin are giant dicks, giving the rest of us a bad name. We have enough problems already trying to convince all the idiots that these setups have no more radiation than an iphone and their old meter.

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    Rocket Surgeon.
  11. Privacy Commissioner is a wet lettuce leaf by CuteSteveJobs · · Score: 3, Informative

    People think they have Privacy Laws and the Privacy Commissioner protecting them. They don't. Like much the government does to reassure the public, they are deliberately weak and there for just for PR value. If you ever try and use them you will find they have all the whipping power of a wet lettuce leaf: The worst thing the Commissioner can do is write a letter to a company breaching your privacy saying "Please don't do that." There is no fine. http://www.theage.com.au/technology/technology-news/youre-being-more-closely-watched-20120916-260ko.html

    Add to that Nicola Roxon's plans to snoop on Australians Internet Usage. Do you really trust public servants to keep your private that information secret? The only privacy they care about is hiding their mistakes from public. http://www.canberratimes.com.au/national/police-fight-to-keep-corby-secrets-20120922-26dni.html

    As for your privacy, they don' think you should have any: http://au.ibtimes.com/articles/380194/20120904/ag-nicola-roxon-bats-data-retention-laws.htm

  12. Opted out of PG&E online bills by Animats · · Score: 4, Informative

    I had to opt out of Pacific Gas and Electric's online billing system and go back to paper bills when they changed their EULA to allow more "disclosure". If I just buy power from them, they're subject to regulatory rules, enforced by the California Public Utilities Commission. But they wanted me to sign up for an "online account", which isn't regulated. If you don't sign up, they're not allowed to redistribute your "smart meter" info. If you sign up, you've consented to distribution to "affiliates".

    I strongly recommend opting out to PG&E customers (California, Nevada) who are concerned about privacy issues.

  13. Re:Shocked by causality · · Score: 4, Insightful

    With the number of things we need to worry about these days, smart metering is absolutely at the bottom. There are a million ways to fool it, and the information isn't all that interesting any way (unless you get really excited about when people use hair dryers and air con).

    So you are willfully neglecting the principle, merely because you see no current significance to its presently immediate applications?

    Most of these "things to worry about" boil down to a few major philosophical ideas. You can understand that and focus on the major ideas. You can also fail to understand that and see millions of "issues" that you'd never have time for because you are unable to grasp how they are interrelated and proceed from the same root. Life is full of choices.

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    It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
  14. Re:Shocked by Tastecicles · · Score: 4, Informative

    (take it from someone who [still] owns a Cybernet Delta 1): the 934 rigs are notorious bleed boxes. Even with a 1.1 SWR (as close to perfect antenna balance as you'll ever get) you can bleed out over 600kHz each way with a 50W amp. The issue was that the equipment was overpowered and undercooled for what was being asked of it (30 miles on an average day?), the bleed induced by the linear amplifiers cooking themselves very quickly. With anything less than perfect SWR you'll bleed out even further into neighbouring bands.

    FWIW, GSM900 was never widely adopted in the UK, distributors instead preferring GSM1800. The 934 crowd never got their bandwidth back to this day.

    Thing is, GSM never even touched 934. GSM900 uses 890–915 MHz to send information from the mobile station to the base station (uplink) and 935–960 MHz for the other direction (downlink), providing 124 RF channels (channel numbers 1 to 124) spaced at 200 kHz. Duplex spacing of 45 MHz is used. Guard bands 100 kHz wide are placed at either end of the range of frequencies.

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    Operation Guillotine is in effect.