Fact check: Conspiracy theories about FEMA’s Oct. 4 emergency alert test spread online [More]
By ridiculing the outlandish ones (spread by provocateurs, for all we know) privacy questions meriting examination are discouraged.
Notes from the Resistance
Fact check: Conspiracy theories about FEMA’s Oct. 4 emergency alert test spread online [More]
By ridiculing the outlandish ones (spread by provocateurs, for all we know) privacy questions meriting examination are discouraged.
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I didn’t need anybody to tell me to power my phone down. I trust a mass emergency digital transmission as much as I trust a mass public vaccination drive.
I set a reminder on my phone (the irony!) to turn my devices off at 1 central. I have most of the alerts blocked, including the test one, and I didn’t know which one this would come through on. I heard phones going off in the office. A very annoying sound. A friend turned his off, too, but he still got it when he turned it back on. I did not.
I was thinking something similar to what you were, David. I was joking with a coworker that the conspiracies could have been started by someone who simply wanted to mock the “fact checkers” for wasting time on something so obviously fake. But someone claiming to be on the right doing it to mock people is likely. I don’t do social media, so I have no idea what people were spreading it, if any. It could all literally be fake news.