The FCC has proposed measures to avoid phoney emergency warnings

The FCC has proposed measures to avoid phoney emergency warnings

The suggestion comes three years after University of Colorado academics cautioned that spoofing FEMA’s presidential notifications was straightforward, with no mechanism to check the broadcasts’ legitimacy. While the 2018 Hawaii missile alarm was the product of an error rather than a hack, it highlighted the dangers of misleading alerts. Even on tiny scales, a phony warning may reach tens of thousands of individuals, thereby causing fear and lowering faith in legitimate signals.