PEPCO, the power utility that serves the District of Columbia, Prince George's County (MD), and most of Montgomery County (MD) is being forced to offer non-RFID smart meters to customers. The concerns, as further explained in a previously written article, is that the meters emit radio frequencies. So, the concern isn't about the couple of hundred volts and amps that is coursing through the meter, to power things that generate radio frequencies (really, how many homes in MoCo do you think are WiFi free?), rather, the concern is about a few milliwatts originated by a device on the outside of a house.
Stop the Insanity!!!
If the concerns arre about the privacy of the information generated by a smart meter, or its security, then I understand. Sure, there's a lot of work to be done to ensure these devices are not attack vectors or are not leaking information. But if someone says they don't want one because they are concerned about RF? My answer: disconnect the service if RF is that much of a concern.
And in the bite-the-hand-that-feeds-you moment, let's turn to AIG, the giant insurance company that was bailed out by the US government a few years back. Seems that the money we lent them, the money they couldn't get on the open market, the money that was needed to avoid bankruptcy, was "too expensive"- we charged them too much interest. It is considering joining a lawsuit saying that they weren't treated fairly. The Board says it has a fiduciary responsibility to consider the lawsuit.
I suppose they all live in houses with smart meters.