An Emergency Alert Test Will Sound On All US Cellphones, TVs and Radios On Wednesday (cbsnews.com) 101
An anonymous reader quotes a report from CBS News: Your electronic devices may alarm you on Wednesday afternoon — but there's a reason for that. A nationwide test of the federal emergency alert system will be broadcast at approximately 2:20 p.m. EDT to cellphones, televisions and radios across the United States at around the same time. Most Americans with wireless cellular devices will receive an emergency alert message, as will most whose televisions or radios are on when the test occurs.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency will conduct Wednesday's test in coordination with the Federal Communications Commission. Emergency alert messages that make up the test are divided into two groups -- the Emergency Alert System (EAS) for radios and televisions, and the Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) for wireless phones -- although both are scheduled to happen at once. Wednesday will mark the seventh nationwide test of the Emergency Alert System. Six previous tests were conducted over the years between November 2011 and August 2021. This will be the third nationwide test of wireless alerts, and the second nationwide test transmitted to all cellphones, FEMA said in a statement. As the wireless alert tests are sent out to phones, the Emergency Alert System tests will be sent out to televisions and radios.
People can elect not to receive certain emergency alert messages to their cellphones from local authorities, or in some instances, simply decide whether to subscribe or not to a specific set of emergency alerts put out by a particular agency. On the other hand, it is not possible to opt out of the upcoming test of the national wireless alert system. All major wireless providers participate in FEMA's wireless alert system. So, most people whose cellphones are turned on and located within range of an active cell tower during the test should receive a message, the agency said (PDF).
The Federal Emergency Management Agency will conduct Wednesday's test in coordination with the Federal Communications Commission. Emergency alert messages that make up the test are divided into two groups -- the Emergency Alert System (EAS) for radios and televisions, and the Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) for wireless phones -- although both are scheduled to happen at once. Wednesday will mark the seventh nationwide test of the Emergency Alert System. Six previous tests were conducted over the years between November 2011 and August 2021. This will be the third nationwide test of wireless alerts, and the second nationwide test transmitted to all cellphones, FEMA said in a statement. As the wireless alert tests are sent out to phones, the Emergency Alert System tests will be sent out to televisions and radios.
People can elect not to receive certain emergency alert messages to their cellphones from local authorities, or in some instances, simply decide whether to subscribe or not to a specific set of emergency alerts put out by a particular agency. On the other hand, it is not possible to opt out of the upcoming test of the national wireless alert system. All major wireless providers participate in FEMA's wireless alert system. So, most people whose cellphones are turned on and located within range of an active cell tower during the test should receive a message, the agency said (PDF).
Hmm... (Score:3)
Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Interesting)
If you have a hidden phone, perhaps because of an abusive partner, or because you are an undercover FBI agent, remember to turn it off.
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
Lets be honest, most hidden phones are hidden because of infidelity. That said, I guess cheaters are people too.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:1)
> I guess cheaters are people too.
Most woman would say cheaters are animals.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: Hmm... (Score:2)
It would also be a bad hour to be out driving on the road. Everyone scrambling to silence their phones, lol.
We did this in the UK a few months back (Score:5, Interesting)
On mobile phones at least, not T Vand radio. Lots of gormless talking heads on TV and radio complaining how dare the gubbermint hijack their phone to send an emergency message that could save their lives one day along with "how do they know where I am?"
I mean FFS, where to even start with that paranoid clown mentality. Clearly their knowledge of how cellular phone systems work is the square root of fuck all.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Oh it gets so much worse. The QNutz are out there claiming it'll activate the nano-virus for the vaxed and kill them all. And this is meant to kill all those smart appliances when the call goes out when the respond to the signal to self destruct. And it'll shut down power grids. And whatever else the EMP crowd was talking about last year as well.
Re: We did this in the UK a few months back (Score:2)
Yeah, it's called the Internet.
QNuts are the conspiracy theorist equivalent of vegans, they will tell you whether you want to know or not.
Re: (Score:2)
Sounds like my ex.
Re: (Score:2)
Wasn't it killer beams from 5G masts? Or is that last months genocide conspiracy?
Re: (Score:2)
I thought they were supposed to give me awesome Magneto powers.
Instead I don't even get better reception, even with booster after booster... What a rip-off!
Re:We did this in the UK a few months back (Score:4, Funny)
From a bilderberger/reptiloid/whatever point of view, wouldn't it make a lot more sense to kill off the non-compliant portion of the population instead of the ones that did what they were told to?
Thinking about it... that's what pretty much happened...
Re: (Score:2)
I don't have the link handy, but one of the anti-vaxxer nutjobs said everyone who got a shot would die on a certain day in 2022. He was a supposed doctor who was against the vaccine and was absolutely certain people were going to die by the millions because of the vaccine.
And yet, here we are.
Re: We did this in the UK a few months back (Score:3)
It's supposed to make all babies (literal not figurative) cry at once, causing them to all soil their diaper around the same time, all across the nation. You're supposed to send the dirty diaper to Trump. (I'm not sure why, it just says that.)
Re: (Score:2)
Thanks for the flashbacks! (*rolls eyes*)
I lost count of how many times I had to tell some braindead simpleton about how it did (end more importantly, did not) work!
(I would have used gormless, but you already did)
Re: (Score:3)
It was funny to us then too. *Us being the people who have their emergency alerts tested monthly along with mobile emergency alerts tested quarterly for the best part of the past decade.
Honestly the way the UK was going about it made it sound like they were going to test nuclear launch sequences and that the world was going to end. They predicted endless traffic jams and all victims of abuse getting beating for hiding a mobile phone. I'm genuinely not surprised the people in the UK are afraid of their own s
Re: remember they scheduled a "test" for 9/11 (Score:3)
Were you with an MVNO? Yeah, I'd be shocked if 911 even works properly from one. (MVNO = third party cell provider reselling access from the big three.)
Re: (Score:2)
But I agree it was altogether a huge anti-climax, my phone didn't even ring at all.
Re: (Score:2)
I know we don't know, but I'm sure the Daily Mail will be eager to tell you the number was HUGE anyway. Seriously this is a complete non-thing. There are many countries which test emergency alert systems frequently and yet the first time I heard any talk of people having car accidents because they get scared or domestic abuse victims getting beaten is in the UK. And it wasn't just some passing comment either. This discussion dominated the news for days.
Like WTF.
Re: (Score:1)
> I mean FFS, where to even start with that paranoid clown mentality.
Start with France I suppose.
"French Assembly passes bill allowing police to remotely activate phone cameras and microphones for surveillance"
https://www.engadget.com/frenc... [engadget.com]
Lawmakers in France's National Assembly have passed a bill that lets police surveil suspects by remotely activating cameras, microphones and GPS location systems on phones and other devices. A judge will have to approve use of the powers, and the recently amended bi
Re: (Score:2)
If you're worried about that sort of thing buy a cheap dumbphone without a camera that can't download apps or be easily hacked.
Re: (Score:1)
Shame it didnt work.
Most phones are not even able to react to it. Mine isnt for example and thats a new upgrade I moved to only recently, the phone was made in 2017 and has years left before I move again.
Alerts (Score:1)
I generally hate non-relevant notifications of all types and so I long ago turned off Amber alerts after being woken up in the middle of the night more than once.
I was going to disable this test notification as well, but it appears that the national alerts are the one alert type that you cannot disable, at least on a Pixel 6 device.
Re: (Score:1)
The peasant does not silence the King.
Re: Alerts (Score:3)
Wish I could silence the Amber alerts.
They do not need to wake anyone up. If you're already up you'll get the alert just fine, if you're sleeping the chances you know anything useful is as close to zero as you can get.
Wake me up for tornados, earth quakes, and other natural disasters that actually put my life at risk, even while I'm sleeping.
Re: (Score:2)
"Wake me up for tornados, earth quakes, and other natural disasters that actually put my life at risk, even while I'm sleeping."
While we may have advance knowledge of tornadoes on radar, we don't have advance knowledge of earthquakes.
Re: Alerts (Score:3)
Earthquakes have secondary risks that a truck passing by doesn't have.
Even if an earthquake has woken you it may be important to know it was an earthquake, and not something else.
Re: (Score:1)
If it's the kind of earthquake we get around here, it's not worth waking anyone up.
But if it's a 7.something (or higher), then yeah.
Re: (Score:2)
If its a 7.something, you more than likely got thrown out of the bed, which for most people is going to wake them up big time, no need for an alert on your phone.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: Alerts (Score:5, Interesting)
Wish I could silence the Amber alerts.
I live in Canada, where our phones theoretically don't allow Amber Alerts to be disabled. But I was pleased to note that when I installed LineageOS on my Samsung, I could and did disable what were called "Presidential Alerts", and I haven't received any Ambers since.
Here in Ontario their primary use seems to be by the provincial police sending notifications of missing persons and child abductions. But the information given is so scant that even if I was out driving around at 3AM with time on my hands and a willingness to help, I could do nothing. The notices also cover too broad an area - I've been awakened in the wee hours by notifications for situations three hours away from me. So I've taken to calling them Scamber Alerts.
Re: Alerts (Score:5, Interesting)
We live in Canada, where the CRTC has mandated that all alerts go out as the highest level built into the protocol, often referred to as 'presidential' or 'nuclear war' level. They choose to not use the amber alert level, or the extreme local threat (aka tornado, severe thunderstorm, etc) level.
This, of course, has lead to alarm fatigue and condition people to, by and large, ignore alerts automatically as they often involve an amber alert hundreds of kilometers away. And that doesn't even get into the fact that the alerts are sometimes sent hours after the child is found, due to various delays.
Re: (Score:2)
Amber Alerts lost their alert privileges for me when I was awoken at 2am for an abducted child who was taken 16 hours prior over 100 miles away. Why? Just why?
Later, say 7-8am, and I can keep an eye out during a commute. Earlier and I may see something while commuting home or grabbing dinner, or will have it in mind for the next day. But 2am? The kidnapper could be 900 miles away and I doubt they expect me to hit the streets on the off-chance he was in my neighborhood, so why send it at all?
And then during
Re: (Score:1)
I live in Canada, where our phones theoretically don't allow Amber Alerts to be disabled. But I was pleased to note that when I installed LineageOS on my Samsung, I could and did disable what were called "Presidential Alerts", and I haven't received any Ambers since.
Maybe that changed at some point because LineageOS won't let me toggle presidential alerts. It does allow you to turn them all off via "Allow alerts" which from the presentation in the UX I assume also means presidential alerts.
Here in Ontario their primary use seems to be by the provincial police sending notifications of missing persons and child abductions
Around here most "child abductions" are custody disputes.
Re: (Score:2)
Unless you happen to be sleeping with Amber...
Re: (Score:1)
You need a rooted Android device, the option to disable these alerts exists in Android but is not made available to the user... normally.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Nice one. My knowledge is outdated I guess, I haven't hacked Android for multiple versions. I had a lot of fun playing with phones for a while, but I got tired of it and now I just have one that works right all the time.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I was going to disable this test notification as well, but it appears that the national alerts are the one alert type that you cannot disable, at least on a Pixel 6 device.
In this case you CAN disable it; it is a scheduled alert after all. Just turn off your phone 15 minutes before the scheduled time, and turn it back on 15 minutes after. You can even set alarms to - Oh, wait...
Re: Alerts (Score:2)
I heard it may queue for 30 minutes. The 15 minutes you specified may not be enough, lol.
Re: (Score:2)
Haha, fair enough. ;)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Thank you for this! Very helpful!
Re: (Score:2)
Agreed! The cell alert system has been over-used and mis-used, calling "wolf" over small things or issues in far off locations.
Do it right or get fucking blocked, sloppasses!
Re: (Score:2)
I was going to disable this test notification as well, but it appears that the national alerts are the one alert type that you cannot disable, at least on a Pixel 6 device.
You can if you build the rom yourself. (You just have to patch CellBroadcastConfigService.java and add a preference item to CellBroadcastSettings.java.)
Of course, IANAL and you should check your local regulations to see if this is legal before doing so.
1st Wednesday of the month (Score:2)
The sirens will be going off anyway
Re: (Score:1)
The October Fourth Event (Score:2)
So that's what the conspiracy theorists have been going on about.
Snore.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, the government always provides plenty of advance notice when they about to enact their secret plan to activate vaccine nanobots via 5G to turn everyone trans/socialist/zombies. LOL
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
I guess they're trying to be optimistic and guess the REST of the federal govt. is not FEMA.
Re: (Score:1)
That theory is wrong, though. The government doesn't even have the technology to create nanoparticles. Even Google barely has nanoparticle technology, and it's not advanced enough for that yet. So it had to be the aliens who did it, obviously. Not sure how anyone missed that point. All the government did was cover it up to hide their incompetence.
Re: (Score:3)
No thanks (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I am tired on constant alerts about lost kids and big thunderstorms.
You can turn those off you know. I turned off the amber alerts after getting ones from all over the country. There are different levels of alerts, and I'm pretty sure there is one that you can't turn off.
We had a huge Thunderstorm in my area one winter, with a lot of flooding. My phone which I keep in the kitchen went on a blood curdling screechfest. I suspect it was a good thing for some people.
Re: (Score:2)
Amber alerts are disabled on my cell phone. My weather radio has a feature where you can enable only the alerts you want - I dont care about a thunderstorm, but I DO care about tornadoes. Flash flood or other types of flood warning mean nothing to me, so I have them turned off too. Basically, I only want to be told about life-threatening conditions (or rather, life threatening while I am inside my house at home). I can go to the weather channel for anything more.
Re: (Score:2)
You might be able to disable them depending on your phone.
I don't, because:
* I live near one of the nation's worst hotspots for child abduction and trafficking.
* Around here big thunderstorms can turn into tornadoes with little or no warning.
YMMV.
Re: (Score:2)
Covid Booster (Score:2)
Is this when we get our updates??
Would be funny (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
The Missouri Highway Patrol sent out a state wide Blue Alert test referring to Batman, they should do the same here!
FTA: "sent out an alert about the driver of a purple/green 1978 Dodge wanted out of Gotham City."
https://www.ky3.com/2022/01/18... [ky3.com]
Re: (Score:2)
For people in domestic abuse situations (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Also if it's constantly plugged in it's battery will quickly die in swell.
No it won't. It's 2023 not 2013. 100% and plugged in does not mean overcharging and it doesn't mean cells are at 100% capacity. There is no reason to not leave a device on charge these days.
Unless you're buying cheap Chinese firework electronics made by idiots who don't understand electronics for idiots who don't understand you shouldn't buy cheap shit.
Re: (Score:1)
> so that it has power in times of need
You would think that might be a good idea but how many can hold on in such an emergency situation while the phone slowly boots up as the abuser is chopping down the door?
What about when you are being abused right at that moment and all you can hope to do is press the SOS button so that a text is sent to whoever will come and save you? I doubt you will have much time while being abused to wait for the phone to start up and then unlock it etc.
Thats probably why its k
Re: (Score:2)
The court better be ready (Score:2)
I have these messages turned off (Score:1)
I have these messages turned off and the reason is government abusing these services. I disabled them after receiving a few annoying messages that had nothing to do with imminent threat. Good job, fuckers.
THIS one made me laugh (Score:1)
I'm here to kick ass and chew bubblegum (Score:2)
And I'm all out of bubblegum.
new method (Score:2)
A new method to annoy people. One thing that the govt is most excellent at doing.
Failure and opting out. (Score:1)
First, you can opt out of anything you don't want to receive if you use an FOSS operating system like Android. While some handset mfgs may disable your ability to disable some notices, fully unlocked FOSS systems (e.g. LineageOS) will easily allow this option.
Secondly, the sources say the "emergency broadcast test" may be pushed back to the 11th if there is bad weather or some nationwide event. It seems to me that an emergency broadcast that can't be sent out due to weather or emergeny suggests the sysem
Re: (Score:2)
The message isn't public; the medium is. (Score:1)
The government can't send agents to force their way into your private home to make announcements.
But it can force its way onto the "public" transmission medium it claims to safeguard on your behalf.
If you happen to have a device - such as a radio, TV, or computer - that receives signals via a medium the government claims power over, then they can push whatever content they want to your device.
If you wish not to receive such messages, the burden is on you to design your own device or modify your purchased de
Probably won't work ... (Score:2)
Thank goodness my car radio still receives AM.
Off button (Score:2)
I wonder if my phone really does turn off completely when I tell it to. I shall find out, I suppose.
{^_^}
OOh (Score:1)
It works on your TV's too?
How does it work over radio? RDS?
will it show up on computers? (Score:2)
The only place in the world is the USA (Score:2)