h a l f b a k e r yThe word "How?" springs to mind at this point.
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The problem is that if it's a real
emergency, the physical infrastructure
for the net is probably down in the
area. This is one of the few applications
for which things like Iridium would've been
useful; perhaps their satellites could be
turned over to FEMA. |
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ObNovel: W. J. Williams, _The Rift_. |
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Another way to ensure your information never gets destroyed: Hide it in what appear to be email addresses and post it to USENET. Spamspewers will preserve it *forever*. |
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Another problem with this is that any information on the internet is either voluntarily looked for, or broadcasted to only a select group of subscribers (multicasting sports scores, for example). You couldn't simply post this to a webpage because if it was an emergency, people who need to know most likely won't be looking at it, and also there exists today no method of multicasting to *everyone* on the internet. You could try to set up a universal emergency multicasting service, but the problem is how to get everyone to suscribe. ("I won't suscribe unless everyone else is...") Also, how would you filter emergency broadcasts? If anyone can make an announcement, then there'd end up being a lot of spammers and if you filtered it, you'd have to have ppl working constantly to filter out all those spammers. |
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I think that right now the internet doesn't have the infrastructure to handle this type of service, although it does seem like a good idea. |
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And Contact was shite anyway... have they never heard of using a different ISP if the mail server is down??? |
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