• [telecom] that Texas horror ques: what "level" are the NOAA cellphone alerts?

    From danny burstein@dannyb@panix.com to comp.dcom.telecom on Tue Jul 8 02:52:22 2025
    From Newsgroup: comp.dcom.telecom

    "level" used a bit loosely...

    expanding: there are diffferent levels of alerts and you can,
    for example, tell your phone to ignore "Amber" (missing children)
    pageouts. Numerous others, too.

    But you can NOT (or shouldn't be able to) shut off the highest
    level ones, i.e., the Presidential "you have 10 minutes until
    nuclear self destruct".

    Anyone know what category NOAA alerts come under?

    Thanks

    _____________________________________________________
    Knowledge may be power, but communications is the key
    dannyb@panix.com
    [to foil spammers, my address has been double rot-13 encoded]

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  • From Garrett Wollman@wollman@hergotha.csail.mit.edu to comp.dcom.telecom on Tue Jul 8 17:58:02 2025
    From Newsgroup: comp.dcom.telecom

    In article <Pine.NEB.4.64.2507080247350.12056@panix3.panix.com>,
    danny burstein <dannyb@panix.com> wrote:
    "level" used a bit loosely...

    expanding: there are diffferent levels of alerts and you can,
    for example, tell your phone to ignore "Amber" (missing children)
    pageouts. Numerous others, too.

    But you can NOT (or shouldn't be able to) shut off the highest
    level ones, i.e., the Presidential "you have 10 minutes until
    nuclear self destruct".

    Anyone know what category NOAA alerts come under?

    I don't, but I do know that NOAA/NWS has been the subject of a lot of
    criticism in the past for issuing excessive weather warnings through
    the Wireless Emergency Alert system, particularly flash-flood alerts, particularly at night, leading people to disable those alerts on their
    phones and miss important alerts. NWS was supposed to have
    recalibrated their thresholds for WEAs but many people may still have
    them disabled.

    On my phone, I have the following high-level categories:

    National
    Extreme
    Severe
    AMBER
    Public safety
    State and local tests

    I have "extreme" and "severe" enabled and never get any so I don't
    have a message history to inspect.

    -GAWollman
    --
    Garrett A. Wollman | "Act to avoid constraining the future; if you can, wollman@bimajority.org| act to remove constraint from the future. This is Opinions not shared by| a thing you can do, are able to do, to do together."
    my employers. | - Graydon Saunders, _A Succession of Bad Days_ (2015)

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