02288nas a2200157 4500008004100000245015500041210006900196260000900265300001200274490000700286520164400293653001701937100001601954700002501970856013501995 2014 eng d00aSmart Metering Systems and Data Sharing: Why Getting a Smart Meter Should Also Mean Getting Strong Information Privacy Controls to Manage Data Sharing0 aSmart Metering Systems and Data Sharing Why Getting a Smart Mete c2014 a215-2530 v223 aSmart meters are being installed in consumers’ homes as the world moves to the smartgrid of intelligent energy networks. Smart meters are near real-time communication devices that can collect and communicate a vast amount of personal data about each customer’s energy use. Questions about who should have access to such data and for what purposes raise significant consumer privacy concerns about data sharing. Because data sharing facilitates secondary uses of energy use data and is essential for third party access to the data, data sharing is a critical activity that needs to be analysed from an information privacy perspective. This article makes three important contributions. First, it identifies the key privacy and data protection concerns for both the EU and USA consumers related to data sharing in smart metering systems. Second, it provides a comparison of EU and US privacy and data protection law as it applies to smart metering systems, revealing gaps in coverage in both systems. Third, it explains how important privacy concerns related to data sharing are being addressed in the EU and the USA, including specific examples of legislation and self-regulatory mechanisms that have been adopted to protect privacy in smart metering systems. From this comparative analysis, potential privacy-enhancing solutions can be identified. Ultimately it will be up to government regulators and industry to adopt local solutions, but the goal of this article is to encourage adoption of regulatory solutions and industry best practices that are consistent with privacy rights and information privacy principles. 10aBusiness Law1 aKing, Nancy1 aJessen, Pernille, W. u/biblio/smart-metering-systems-and-data-sharing-why-getting-smart-meter-should-also-mean-getting-001844nas a2200157 4500008004100000245010200041210006900143260001700212300001200229490000700241520135400248653001701602100001601619700002501635856002601660 2010 eng d00aProfiling the Mobile Customer: Privacy Concerns When Behavioural Advertisers Target Mobile Phones0 aProfiling the Mobile Customer Privacy Concerns When Behavioural  aOxfordc2010 a455-4780 v263 aMobile customers are increasingly confronted with behavioural advertising targeted individually on the basis of profiles generated by applying technologies to mine databases containing personally-identifying or anonymous data. This article is Part I of a two part series on “Profiling the Mobile Customer”. Part I answers the questions: “What is profiling in the context of behavioural advertising?” and “How will consumer profiling impact the privacy of mobile customers?”. The article examines the EU and U.S. regulatory frameworks for protecting privacy and personal data in regards to behavioural advertising that targets mobile customers. It identifies potential harms to privacy and personal data related to profiling for behavioural advertising. It evaluates the extent to which the existing regulatory frameworks in the EU and the U.S.provide an adequate level of protection. Consequently, the article identifies the privacy gaps in the regulatory frameworksthat will need to be addressed to adequately protect mobile consumers from profiling by marketers. Part II of Profiling the Mobile Customer that will appear in the next volume of the CLSR. It will discuss whether industry self-regulation or privacy enhancing technologies will be adequate to protect consumer privacy, or rather, whether new legislation will be necessary.10aBusiness Law1 aKing, Nancy1 aJessen, Pernille, W. uwww.Sciencedirect.com