NYTimes: Your Landlord Could Know That You’re Not at Home Right Now

NYTimes: Your Landlord Could Know That You’re Not at Home Right Now by Michael McKee (“Key fobs and other smart-access technologies make it easier for us to get in and out of our homes — but they’re also a privacy hazard.”)

Over the last two decades, keyless “smart access” technologies that use fobs, pin codes, smartphone apps — and most alarmingly, biometric recognition technology — have become widely adopted, transforming the way tenants access their homes and live their lives. For those whose buildings have gone keyless, many, if not most, would be surprised to find that every time they tap into their apartment or building with a fob, a piece of reference data is created and tracked by their landlord or property manager.

As unsettling as this is, we have not found a single law on the books anywhere in the country that protects tenant data, and for the moment at least, landlords can do whatever they want with it. It’s the wild west, and few have even noticed the problem.

Consider a tenant who wakes up every morning to walk the dog or to go to the gym: The fob system records the time the tenant comes back to the apartment and the entrance used. The same happens when that tenant returns from work or goes out with friends for dinner. This data gives landlords the ability to paint a picture of when a tenant is home, who the tenant shares access with and how often, and when the tenant’s kids come home from school. In the most concerning cases, some smart home systems give landlords access to a resident’s utility data, such as heat, electricity and Wi-Fi usage rates. Using this information, bad actor landlords have a new tool at their disposal to harass tenants — and in some cases, to try to evict them.

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