
A sophisticated burglar might use these data to figure out when you're away on vacation, the better to rob your house.Ĭustomer data could also give hackers a way to bring down the grid. Just as they use phishing attacks to elicit passwords, credit-card numbers and other data stored on home computers, hackers could find ways of intercepting customer data from smart meters. The smart grid would also provide hackers with a potential source of private information to steal. Such an attack could result in loss of communication between the utility and meters-and the subsequent denial of power to your home or business. Smart meters with designated public IP addresses may be susceptible to denial of service attacks, in which the devices are overwhelmed with spurious requests-the same kind of attacks now made on Web sites. Some crucial systems allow unlimited entry attempts from outside.Īs the power industry continues to invest in information technology, these vulnerabilities will only get worse. Logon information is sometimes unencrypted. Information about vendors, user names and passwords has gone unsecured.
#Cyber security in smart grids install#
Utilities and private power firms have failed to install patches in security software against malware threats.

The federal government has catalogued tens of thousands of reported vulnerabilities in the 200,000-plus miles of high-voltage transmission lines, thousands of generation plants and millions of digital controls. The grid is already more open to cyberattacks than it was just a few years ago. And yet little is being done to make it all secure. Connecting what are now isolated systems to the Internet will make it possible to gain access to remote sites through the use of modems, wireless networks, and both private and public networks. Achieving greater efficiency and control requires hooking almost every aspect of the electricity grid up to the Internet-from the smart meter that will go into each home to the power transmission lines themselves. As currently envisaged, however, it's a dangerously dumb idea. It would vastly improve the reliability, availability and efficiency of the electric system. What's not to like about the idea of an electricity grid that can work at top efficiency? By wrapping power transmission lines in advanced information technologies and the Internet, a smart grid would enable us to integrate alternative energy sources such as rooftop solar panels and local wind turbines into the power supply, balance supply with demand and optimize the flow of power to each consumer-even down to the level of individual appliances. President Barack Obama's talk about the need for a "smart grid" sounds, well, smart.
