Abstract
ABSTRACTEnergy management inside a blockchain framework developed for smart grids is primarily concerned with improving intrusion detection to protect data privacy. The emphasis is on real‐time detection of cyberattacks and preemptive forecasting of possible risks, especially in the realm of electricity theft within smart grid systems. Existing Electricity Theft Detection techniques for smart grids have obstacles such as class imbalance, which leads to poor generalization, increased complexity due to large EC data aspects, and a high false positive rate in supervised models, resulting in incorrect classification of regular customers as abnormal. To provide security in the smart grid, a novel BLS Privacy Blockchain with Siamese Bi‐LSTM is proposed. Initially, the privacy‐preserving Boneh‐Lynn‐Shacham blockchain technique is built on BLS Short signature and hash algorithms, which mitigate misclassification rates and false positives in the detection of smart grid attacks. Then, a hybrid framework employs an intrusion detection algorithm based on Siamese Bidirectional Long Short‐Term Memory to semantically distinguish between harmful and authentic behaviors, thereby improving data quality and predictive capabilities. Furthermore, a Recurrent Neural Network‐Generative Adversarial Network is presented for detecting electricity fraud, which addresses the issue of class imbalance. This uses both supervised and unsupervised loss functions to produce synthetic theft samples that closely resemble actual theft incidents. From the experiment, it is showing that the proposed models perform with high accuracy and low error rates. The proposed model from the outcomes when compared to other existing models achieves high accuracy, detection rate, recall, and low computation time.
Published Version
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