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Science-Technology Title: It is NOT eerie: Hacked Emergency Message Foreshadowed Devastating NJ Train Crash: “Would You? Could You? On a Train?” There is a simple explanation as to what happened. It was probably a repeat of one of the glitches that has previously occurred on the EAS, the incident was not caused by hacking and neither is this a new grand conspiracy theory. This EAS broadcast was caused by a glitch similar to one described below. Until the bugs are worked out of the EAS
.these type glitches will probably happen again. Could you, would you There is nothing mystic about that phase and there is nothing ominous as to the meaning. It is simply a phrase from the lyrics of a song by Dr. Seuss titled: Green Eggs And Ham. [
] Would you like them [
] I would not, could not in a tree. A train! A train! Not on a train! Not in a tree! [
] http://www.lyricsfreak.com/d/dr+seuss/green+eggs+and+ham_20208487.html Here are many other incidents of glitches in the EAS: The EAS was, notably, not used during the aftermath of the September 11 attacks in New York and Washington. Richard Rudman, the chairman of the EAS National Advisory Committee, explained that near immediate coverage in the national media meant that the media itself provided the warning or alert of what had happened and what might happen as quickly as the information could be distributed. "Some events really do serve as their own alerts and warnings. With the immediate live media coverage, the need for an EAS warning was lessened." 34 PEP stations were kept on high alert for use if the President had decided to order an Emergency Action Notification. "PEP is really a last-ditch effort to get a message out if the president cannot get to the media."[26] On February 1, 2005, someone activated an EAS message over radio and television stations in Connecticut telling residents to evacuate the state immediately. Officials at the Office of Emergency Management announced that the activation and broadcast of the Emergency Alert System was in error due to possibly the wrong button being pressed. "State police said they received no calls related to the erroneous alert."[27] On June 26, 2007, the EAS in Illinois was activated at 7:35 a.m. CDT and issued an Emergency Action Notification Message for the United States. This was followed by dead air and then WGN radio (the station designated to simulcast the alert message) being played on almost every television and radio station in the Chicago area and throughout much of Illinois.[28] Instead of hearing official information, what viewers heard instead was a very confused Garry Meier from WCKG, who was wondering "what that beeping was all about". The accidental EAS activation was caused when a government contractor installing a new satellite receiver as part of a new national delivery path incorrectly left the receiver connected and wired to the state EOC's EAS transmitter before final closed circuit testing of the new delivery path had been completed. [29] On October 19, 2008, KWVE- FM in San Clemente, California was scheduled to conduct a Required Weekly Test. However, it conducted a Required Monthly Test by mistake, causing all stations and cable systems in the immediate area to relay the test. In addition, the operator aborted the test midway through, leading the station to fail to broadcast the SAME EOM burst to end the test, causing all area outlets to broadcast KWVE-FM's programming until those stations took their equipment offline.[30] On September 15, 2009, the Federal Communications Commission fined its licensee, Calvary Chapel Costa Mesa, $5,000 for the botched EAS test. After the fine was levied, various state broadcast associations in the United States submitted joint letters to the FCC, protesting against the fine, saying that the FCC could have handled the matter better.[31] On November 13, 2009, the FCC rescinded its fine against KWVE-FM, but had still admonished the station for broadcasting an unauthorized RMT, as well as omitting the code to end the test.[32] On May 20, 2010, NOAA All-Hazards and CSEPP tone alert radios in the Hermiston, Oregon area, near the Umatilla Chemical Depot, were activated with an EAS alert shortly after 5 p.m. The message transmitted was for a severe thunderstorm warning, issued by the National Weather Service in Pendleton, but the transmission broadcast instead was a long period of silence, followed by a few words in Spanish. Umatilla County Emergency Management has stressed there was no emergency at the depot.[33] In October 2011, the FCC fined WHPR-FM in Highland Park, Michigan $22,000 for numerous violations, one of which was not having any EAS equipment in use; an employee of the station pointed out that the station's EAS decoder was stored in a closet.[35] On November 9, 2011, the first National EAS Test was conducted (as described above). Many people that were watching television or listening to radio reported barely hearing the audio, not seeing the video, hearing overlapping audio, or on cable and satellite systems which redirect to one certain channel slot to launch the test, were stuck on the EAS channel without routing to the test (such as a non-essential shopping channel, TV Guide Network, a Music Choice audio channel, or in DirecTV's case, a Sonic Tap audio channel airing Lady Gaga's "Paparazzi" at the time).[36] On June 15, 2012, WNKY, the NBC/CBS affiliate in Bowling Green, Kentucky premiered an advertisement for a local licensed sports apparel store it produced, featuring EAS tones within the ad used in a non- emergency manner and went out over the station's main NBC signal and CBS digital subchannel. On November 5, 2013, the station's owner, Max Media, through its licensee, MMK License, was assessed a $39,000 fine (listed in the FCC's statement as a "voluntary contribution to the U.S. Treasury") by the FCC due to the ad. WNKY's digital channels, in addition to the FCC fine, will also launch a local campaign about the EAS through their programs and the station's website, air additional emergency preparation public service announcements, and lease space on their tower to the Warren County Emergency Management agency and the City of Bowling Green for modernized warning equipment. Additionally in the same manner, the FCC proposed a $25,000 fine against the cable network TBS and its corporate parent Time Warner for an inappropriate use of EAS tones within a 2012 promotional spot for their talk show Conan which had not been put past standards and practices; the use of tones was part of a promotion involving guest Jack Black.[37][38] On February 11, 2013, hackers broke into the EAS networks in Great Falls, Montana and Marquette, Michigan to broadcast an emergency alert that zombies have risen from their graves in several counties in Montana and Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Stations KRTV in Great Falls, WBUP and WNMU-TV in Marquette broke into programming to broadcast the false alerts.[39] [40] Details on the hacking incident remain unknown at present, though a representative for Monroe Electronics, a maker and distributor of EAS equipment, mentioned that some stations do not change their logins or passwords, opting to use factory presets instead. Because of this, trade groups, including the Michigan Association of Broadcasters, urged broadcasters to change their passwords and to recheck their security measures.[41] On February 13, 2013, WIZM- FM in La Crosse, Wisconsin inadvertently triggered the EAS on WKBT-DT by playing a recording of the fake alert during its morning show.[42] The alert was seemingly inspired by the Anthrax song "Fight 'Em 'Til You Can't"; the message relayed in the incident lifted a quote from the song's introduction about a zombie uprising. The audio used, meanwhile, came from a video posted to YouTube in September 2008. [43] In March 2014, the EAS was activated in Orlando, Florida for a Child Abuction Emergency; the alert lasted for 30 seconds followed by dead air. On October 24, 2014, television viewers of certain stations in Atlanta, Detroit, and Austin reported seeing Emergency Action Notification messages and notifications that the programming was being interrupted by the White House, despite the fact that there was no real emergency.[44] The emergency alert originated at Nashville, Tennessee radio station WSIX-FM, where morning show host Bobby Bones replayed the 2011 EAS test as part of a rant about a genuine EAS test locally interrupting Game 2 of the 2014 World Series on October 22. The errant test was relayed to some radio and television stations and cable systems nationwide, as Bobby Bones' program was also broadcast on other Country-formatted stations, particularly those owned by WSIX-FM's parent company, iHeartMedia (formerly Clear Channel Communications).[45] On May 19, 2015, iHeartMedia was fined $1 million for the incident, and was ordered to implement a three-year compliance plan and remove all EAS tones or similar-sounding noises from its audio production libraries in order to avoid any further incidents.[46] On Saturday, September 3, 2016, television viewers in Suffolk County, New York saw a message crawl across their television screen erroneously calling for an evacuation of the entire county.[47] The message was intended to announce a voluntary evacuation order for Fire Island, a barrier beach community threatened by Tropical Storm Hermine. Instead, what showed up on television screens at 7:40 p.m. on read, Civil Authorities have issued an Evacuation Immediate for the following New York counties: Suffolk. Effective until September 0407:10 AM EDT. This is an emergency message from. It ended there. According to Newsday, a spokeswoman for the Federal Emergency Management Agency said its officials are investigating why the message, sent by Suffolk County Fire, Rescue and Emergency Services (FRES), was shortened. About 10 to 15 minutes after the first message, the original warning reappeared with the new message UPDATED Message Voluntary evacuation of Fire Island ONLY by 1 pm Saturday 9/4/16 tacked onto the end. Greg Miniutti, chief of communication for FRES, stated that the dispatch supervisor who sends the alert typed in the message correctly through the countys Code Red system. FEMA spokeswoman Lauren Lefebvre said the original message that appeared on television is generated automatically by the computer system. The agency is investigating why the rest of the countys message wasnt broadcast. The error generated a flood of 911 calls.[47] During the second National Periodic on September 28, 2016, many viewers of DirecTV and DISH, the same two cable operators affected by the first National Periodic in 2011, complained that they were once again not able to see or hear the audio of the test. One PEP in Cleveland, NBC3, had the test freeze halfway through and change to a static screen, in which the audio was overmixed and loud enough to blow out TV speakers and cause hearing loss at point-blank. The screen then froze without playing the audio message and changed to the PEP channel and EOM blasts were heard shortly after. A YouTube video [48] also showed the test coming in the form of a repeated Child Abduction Emergency with garbled sound. This information is presented to you through the efforts of a retired U.S. Air Force Electronic Warfare Officer and courtesy of the Canary Clan. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 5.
#5. To: Gatlin (#0)
OMG! Talk about your loony conspiracy theories. You don't have a clue what you are babbling about. The text is generated from the system itself - and I will repeat it once again for the terminally ignorant. The phrase is NOT one that would be generated accidentally by a station. it was probably from a spurious signal Probably? I know for a fact you are full of shit - I have the experience to back up my claims - all you have is a "probably".
#6. To: Deckard (#5)
Your "experience" cannot prove whether it was a hack or another glitch like the ARCO commercian that ran on EAS.
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