alexpgp: (Schizo)
[personal profile] alexpgp
Via Yahoo!News:
Emergency alerts may soon be delivered by more than just your television set or old-fashioned radio: The federal government is considering alerting you via text message should a possible natural disaster or terrorist attack directly affect your area.
Incredible! These bright bozo legislators want to increase load on the communications infrastructure and push a huge wad of SMS messages through the network, during a time when the ability to communicate may mean the difference between life and death!

(During such stressful times in my experience, I seem to recall public announcements asking people to not make unnecessary calls, y'dig?)

It'd be like a cyberassault, combining the best features of SMS spam and a denial of service attack, except it'd be self-inflicted and paid for by tax dollars.

I wonder if legislators were this stupid back in the pre-Cold-War days?

Cheers...

UPDATE: Maybe I was a little harsh with my initial assessment, but I still think this is a typical example of Grandstanding Congresscritters With Too Much Idle Time On Their Hands™.

Date: 2005-07-29 11:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bandicoot.livejournal.com
Actually, experiences during the NY and London attacks showed that while cell phones often didn't work because of overload in the system, text messages got through. I'm not sure why - maybe because of reduced bandwidth requirements or something. I'm not sure what purpose general system-wide government alerts would serve, though.

Date: 2005-07-29 11:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eastexpert.livejournal.com
Amazingly, recently I have subscribed to a certain service here, which notifies by text messages (= called SMS in States) if there is something happening in the vicinity of your postcode. The price is minuscule about £1.50 per year, so I didn't think twice.

It already has worked several times: during incidents on M4, the motorway connecting us with London, during bombings in London as well. Considering that on 21 July I was in Scotland on holiday, it urged me to check the BBC News to understand what's happening.

Date: 2005-07-30 02:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] skipperja.livejournal.com
Sounds like "typical grandstanding" to me.

Now that I'm back on the government network, I've received a notice to look at the White House proposed "Working for America Act." At first I thought it had something to do with incentives for civil servants to do volunteer work, but it's a revamping of civil service laws to reward the best workers and make managers do a better job.

Date: 2005-07-30 05:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kf6gpe.livejournal.com
I like the idea that one of the repliers has access to, that is, getting information for your region. Otherwise, it's a horrid waste of money, and yes, I agree it's a whacked idea.

Interestingly, as carriers like VZW and Cingular adopt support for cell broadcast (basically the notion of multicast for SMS), the impact on the network would be negligible... hmm.. I wonder if that's where the idea came from? Carriers lobbying for money to defray the cost of getting cell broadcast supported?

*shudder*

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