Will Seattle's new energy meters be too smart? The ACLU is worried

Seattle City Light will place advanced meters in homes and apartment buildings this summer. Crews will start installing the meters north of the Ship Canal and work their way south. City officials say the digital meters will record the energy consumption of an entire house, or in the case of apartment buildings, the entire level. They'll collect the data and send it wirelessly to Seattle City Light's system. The utility's Scott Thompsen says the digital meters will give customers a more accurate reading of their energy usage.

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It will also mostly eliminate the estimated reads that were partly responsible for past billing errors. “With advanced metering, we don't have to depend on a meter reader being able to get into your yard, and go to your meter, and physically visit it in order to get the information,” says Thompsen. “The meter sends it to us wirelessly. And you're going to have a direct reading on how much electricity you've used.” But the ACLU calls the new system powerful surveillance technology. Among other complaints, the ACLU's Shankar Narayan says City Light's current privacy assessment is unclear. Narayan says they want much more transparency on what will happen with the customer data that will be handled by a third party.

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