Twitter Launches Emergency Alerts
wiredmikey writes "Twitter on Wednesday launched a system for emergency alerts which can help spread critical information when other lines of communication are down. Twitter Alerts are designed to help communicate in natural disasters or other emergencies when traditional channels may be overloaded or unavailable. 'We know from our users how important it is to be able to receive reliable information during these times,' Twitter product manager Gaby Pena said in a blog post. Users who sign up to receive an account's Twitter Alerts will receive a notification directly to their phone for tweets marked as alerts from certain senders. Some of those able to send alerts include the American Red Cross, Federal Emergency Management Agency, World Health Organization, and government and non-government agencies in Japan and South Korea."
Other than being accessible by different devices, doesn't Twitter still need data (either mobile or broadband)? How is this going to help much if other forms of communication are down?
reliable information
twitter
Earthquake very strong, crushed under chunk of house, check my location on foursquare, #dying
build the EMS onto Twitter. Twitter goes MySpace.
Just in time for the new season of American Idol.
If a Kardashian so much as farts, word goes out like it were an Amber Alert.
But more seriously, Twitter has been used in Egypt's turmoil and other real-world events. This just formalizes what's already being done by its users.
Laughter is the Spackle of the Soul.
must... maintain... social... RELEVANCE! add... value!!
Laughter is the Spackle of the Soul.
Season 13 looks to be a catastrophic tragedy indeed.
Laughter is the Spackle of the Soul.
I remember on 9/11 all the major news sites were effectively DDoS. I hope they and twitter now have a convenient switch to flip that will, in the case of the news sites, jettison all the garbage ad content and the complex page rendering code in favor of something more textual that would result in 100x page view scaling. For twitter I would imagine dedicating 10% of their infrastructure to purely asynchronous emergency broadcasts would do the trick in such a circumstance.
Alerts are fine so long as filters can be applied to minimize the number of people that receive them. For example, GPS coordinates could be effective at limiting the number of recipients. Add to that accelerometer data to determine if the person is moving or possibly asleep - also helpful.
Alerts must be minimized or else people will start ignoring them. It is similar to how people would just click "Allow" whenever Vista prompted them with a security warning - most people would not even read the message after seeing so many prompts. So use some intelligent filters along with sensor data to minimize the number of alerts or risk all alerts being ignored.
When I started getting AMBER Alerts on my iPhone, I could turn those off.
Maybe I don't care if there's a tsunami that will kill people 300 miles away at the vulnerable coast, or I'm ok with the project 100,000 people death toll from a factor 7 quake in Seattle ...
It's like police reports. If you read them too much you live in Fear, and overemphasize your actual risk factor, when you should be far more worried about accidents in the home and the fact you ran out of bandaids and your fire extinguisher is empty..
If it's anything that severe, there's usually not a lot you can do. And you should have done it before, not during.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
And the reason I have a Twitter account devoted to emergencies. http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/seismic_waves.png
Some of those able to send alerts include the American Red Cross, Federal Emergency Management Agency, World Health Organization, and government and non-government agencies in Japan and South Korea.
Others able to send alerts include anyone able to momentarily spoof Twitter into thinking they're one of the listed agencies...
There is a very easy way to do this. Don't be on facebook 24/7.
The service is available for very few governments: US, Japan, Korea. I wonder if they talked with others local or national governments before launching the service. There is something rude to tell citizen of a given nation that US officials can send them an alert, but not their own government for which they voted..
How better to determine which of the Twits are in the disaster zone and therefore going to be needing health care adverts, insurance company adverts, builder adverts, new car adverts, funeral service adverts, and (if in the United States) lawyer adverts etc...
Patent litigation: A doctrine of Mutually Assured Destruction... in which everyone seems willing to push the button
I'm confused. Name the last major disaster that forced people to follow large-scale national instructions where any significant number of those persons had access to twitter? Last I checked, cell towers are the first te become useless, and home internet is the second to fall apart.
So let me get this straight. We used to use air raid sirens, that everyone within 50km could hear, and it cost virtually nothing to have one siren per township. Then we went to air horns and mega phones where public announcements could be heard for blocks and again humans needed zero infrastructure to hear them..
Now what? Now aliens are attacking during a hurricane and I need a smartphone, a data package, a fully-charged battery, and how many bars of connectivity?