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Nuke Scare


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2018 Jan 16, 1:22pm   1,441 views  5 comments

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1   RWSGFY   2018 Jan 16, 1:41pm  

The best way to do it is to force the guy who's sending out the alert to type in "This is not a drill" in order to send the real thing.
2   Tenpoundbass   2018 Jan 17, 8:33am  

Yeah sounds like the Open source morons with their precious software best practices and designs that created the universally flopped Healthcare.org failure, is here to save us and tell us how to design software.

If you've got morons that don't read the prompts and frivolously click through any dialog so they can get back to Facebook on their phone. Then you've got an Affirmative Action problem, not a Technological one. It worked until Trump called a few nations a shit hole didn't it? Keep on resisting pantloads, you might convince the SJW to vote Republican.
3   Tenpoundbass   2018 Jan 17, 8:41am  

Satoshi_Nakamoto says
The best way to do it is to force the guy who's sending out the alert to type in "This is not a drill" in order to send the real thing.


The best way is to have qualified people you trust to convey the message from the officials in the Federal government when told to. And they type in the actual message being sent.
Also I'm not buying the guy sent the wrong message. That's what Dev, and Stage sandboxes are for. You test the readiness in test environments. You don't have the test system and the live system button on the same page in any production anywhere!
5   anonymous   2018 Jan 30, 2:07pm  

anonymous says
What makes this case particularly disconcerting wasn’t simply that it was the result of human error,


Yes it was.

Worker who sent missile alert had past issues.

The now-fired Hawaii emergency worker who sent a false missile alert that caused widespread panic and confusion had performance issues in the past.

A report released Tuesday from an internal investigation into the Jan. 13 alert says the worker confused real-life events and drills at least two previous times. State officials say he was fired Friday.

The report describes a drill leading to the mistaken alert. Even though the word “exercise” was said six times, the employee who pushed the button said he did not hear it.

According to the report, co-workers say he just sat there and seemed confused as others tried to let the public know it was a false alarm.

https://apnews.com/4b97e6b961274f22916c0157072a262d?utm_campaign=SocialFlow&utm_source=Twitter&utm_medium=AP

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