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Crime Security Software

It Took Nearly Three Hours For France's Terror Alert App To Respond To Nice Attack (theverge.com) 278

Amar Toor, reporting for The Verge: A terror alert app released by the French government last month has come under criticism after taking hours to notify users of Thursday night's attack in Nice. The app, called SAIP was released by the French Interior Ministry on iOS and Android in June, ahead of the Euro 2016 soccer tournament. According to the ministry, the app would provide users with alerts and information within 15 minutes of a terrorist attack being confirmed. But it apparently took much longer to send out alerts following last night's attack in Nice, where a man drove a truck into a crowded seaside promenade during Bastille Day celebrations, killing at least 84 people and leaving 18 others in critical condition. Users who had downloaded the app posted phone screenshots to Twitter last night showing that SAIP sent out its first alert just after 1:30AM local time -- nearly three hours after the attack began. Facebook, by contrast, activated its Safety Check feature shortly after the attack was carried out, and French politicians urged those in the area to check in using that feature, as SAIP remained silent.
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It Took Nearly Three Hours For France's Terror Alert App To Respond To Nice Attack

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  • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Friday July 15, 2016 @09:07AM (#52517477) Homepage Journal
    ...the democrats to get on the air quickly and start advocating for Banning ALL Assault Trucks immediately!!

    ;)

    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 15, 2016 @09:16AM (#52517527)

      I rented a large "moving truck" last year. I didn't even need a background check. They didn't even ask why I needed such a big truck

      It is scary how easy it is to get a large truck like that.

      • You were already veted, and registered in a government database, and you needed proof of that to rent the car.

        It is called a driver's licence.

        It is a lot more security than you have with guns.

        • You were already veted, and registered in a government database, and you needed proof of that to rent the car.

          It is called a driver's licence.

          You don't have to have a license to BUY a car.....you don't even have to have one if you use it on private property.

      • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

        I rented a large "moving truck" last year. I didn't even need a background check. They didn't even ask why I needed such a big truck

        It is scary how easy it is to get a large truck like that.

        If the truck is black with plastic trim does that make it an assault truck?

    • by Fire_Wraith ( 1460385 ) on Friday July 15, 2016 @09:24AM (#52517597)
      Banning trucks would only put us at more risk, because the only effective defense against a bad guy with a truck, is a good guy with a truck.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        Though in this case, it turned out the only (semi)effective defense against the bad guy with a truck was a good guy with a gun....

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The only 100% effective method is to start addressing the problem about a decade before the guy gets to the stage where he wants to commit mass murder.

      • by godrik ( 1287354 )

        Thanks for making me laugh!
        I really needed it after this horrific event.

    • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

      ...the democrats to get on the air quickly and start advocating for Banning ALL Assault Trucks immediately!!

      Considering that a lot of the flappy headed media turned around and were using phrases like "children feared dead as truck attacks family event." [twitter.com] It wouldn't surprise me. So far I've seen CBC, NYT, WAPO and CBS all using language that would make you think the truck got up all on it's own and decided to attack people.

      • by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Friday July 15, 2016 @11:00AM (#52518401) Homepage

        The media is certain that guns force people to kill, so trucks must do it as well.

        They refuse to deal with the real problem, there are batshit insane people in the world that want to kill others....

        Maybe making murder illegal will fix it?

        • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

          The media is certain that guns force people to kill, so trucks must do it as well.

          Seems to me there is a lot of political correctness going on, the media(many reporters, editors, and owners) would rather believe it's *anything* other than what it actually is. In many cases those people who were at the front of saying "it's okay, there isn't a big problem" or whatever else, don't have a way out and have to double down on the narrative that they've created rather then saying: "Gee, I guess those awful xyz people(conservative/right wingers/libertarians/etc) were right."

          But you're right, th

    • ...the democrats to get on the air quickly and start advocating for Banning ALL Assault Trucks immediately!!

      ;)

      And the NRA has called for everybody to shoot at all trucks coming suspiciously close.

    • ...the democrats to get on the air quickly and start advocating for Banning ALL Assault Trucks immediately!!

      ;)

      I believe the Brits are already talking about trying to limit "truck crime".

  • by Chatterton ( 228704 ) on Friday July 15, 2016 @09:07AM (#52517479) Homepage

    The keyword is "being confirmed". It take time to confirm that a truck running over people is a criminal act and not 'just' an accident.
    But in the end this demonstrate that this application is completely un-useful...

    • The keyword is "being confirmed". It take time to confirm that a truck running over people is a criminal act and not 'just' an accident.

      Why exactly does it have to be a confirmed terrorist act first? Seems to me that it doesn't. Send the alert out with the existing relevant info for all suspected terrorist attacks, and then update the alert as more information comes in.

      I can only think of one reason not to do it this way, and its because some people for some strange reason feel that it has to be a confirmed terrorist attack first.

      You are one such person. Please explain it to us, why exactly does it have to be a confirmed terrorist atta

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      The keyword is "being confirmed".

      Right. Because if this was the USA and it turned out to be an old person driving a large sedan, it would have been confirmed as being "Thursday".

  • by Eloking ( 877834 ) on Friday July 15, 2016 @09:13AM (#52517507)

    I know that news such as this one always attract criticism about the lack of technology from "some" people ion the community, but as many others /. users have pointed out, /. is also supposed to be about "stuff that matters".

    So, my question is, how did it occurred in the editor's compassionless mind that the stupid delay of the terror app was more relevant than the +300 victims of this tragedy?

    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      Well, I do feel /. should try to put a nerd/tech spin on things and not be just another general news source but it requires some tact and delicacy to not come across as "oh and 84 people died too". Maybe something like:

      "Bastille Day terror in Nice, Alert App warns three hours later"
      "Last night a man drove a truck into a crowded seaside promenade during Bastille Day celebrations in Nice, killing at least 84 people and leaving 18 others in critical condition. The attacker was killed after a firefight with pol

      • by Eloking ( 877834 )

        Well, I do feel /. should try to put a nerd/tech spin on things and not be just another general news source but it requires some tact and delicacy to not come across as "oh and 84 people died too". Maybe something like:

        "Bastille Day terror in Nice, Alert App warns three hours later"

        I sincerely try to understand your point but I just don't get why. Why do we need to put something "nerdy" when 95% of all discussion will be about the actual tragedy anyway?

    • Question for you: Should every single website on the internet feature nothing but the same outpouring of compassion for the 300+ victims, not to mention news papers, TV and radio as well? Should we shut down the world and ban anyone from talking about anything but these 300+ people?

      God forbid there was a piece of technology involved some nerds may be interested in. Nope we shouldn't talk about that on slashdot, we should just have the same thing I would get from every single other source of media social or

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 15, 2016 @09:18AM (#52517539)

    Last I heard, there was considerable evidence that it might not have been terrorism; it might have just someone going apeshit and committing mass murder.

    My guess is that the French government had no idea whether or not it was terrorism, and after 3 hours they just decided to err on the side of caution and issue the alert, just in case.

    Of course, that raises the whole question as to why anyone would give a damn what the motive behind a mass murder is, in any situation where they're trying to get information quickly. Regardless of whether the truck driver is politically motivated or not, you want to get the fuck out of his way. It sounds like the very idea of a "terror alert" app just might be amazingly stupid. A "danger alert" app would be a hundred times more useful.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      considerable evidence that it might not have been terrorism

      The usual suspects in the left-wing media are indeed pushing that line.

      Of course, that raises the whole question as to why anyone would give a damn what the motive behind a mass murder is

      No, it really doesn't raise the question. Motive is always crucial. Politicians use the motives of mass killers for political capital. There is never any concern for this "question" when politicians can use an event for gun control purposes, for instance.

      • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

        Motive is always crucial.

        A guy with a history of petty crimes, in the process of getting divorced, and had just been fired from his job. Even with the Muslim name, it sounds more like a guy going postal than anything else.

        • by swb ( 14022 ) on Friday July 15, 2016 @11:12AM (#52518501)

          A guy with a history of petty crimes, in the process of getting divorced, and had just been fired from his job.

          That's the new recruiting criteria for ISIS affiliates. People who only ever had it together in a marginal sense going through yet another crisis realizing they can now be somebody by killing a bunch of people in the name of some religious identity they barely have.

          These people are Travis Bickle from the movie "Taxi Drivier" except rather than focusing their simple minded rage and failure on crime, they're focusing it on the larger society they only sort of fit into, and usually only sort of fitting into it for reasons that have nothing to do with their religious identity.

          In many ways,the Dallas cop shooting was an ISIS attack in all but name -- disaffected loser unable to reconcile his place in life with his own actions, lashing out at the part of society he blamed for it in the name of a larger and more righteous cause. That shooter just chose to identify with some kind of black power mindset rather than Islamic terrorism.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      > there was considerable evidence that it might not have been terrorism

      Right... the guy ramming his box truck into ~300 people (84 dead, 200+ injured as of this morning), while accelerating, firing a machine gun, and shouting "Allahu Akbar" the entire time (as reported by eye witnesses), might NOT have been terrorism... There was no period in time where there was considerable evidence of anything BUT terrorism. Anyone on the scene knew what the deal was, the first responders knew, the cops that pumped

    • Last I heard, there was considerable evidence that it might not have been terrorism; it might have just someone going apeshit and committing mass murder.

      According to various sources the driver was shouting "allahu akbar" (search for it on Google or read the wikipedia article if you do not believe me). Guns and grenades were found in the vehicle after the attack as well. I'm not sure how that could leave any doubt about whether it was terrorism or not.

      • by Tailhook ( 98486 )

        I'm not sure how that could leave any doubt about whether it was terrorism or not.

        There isn't any doubt among the French at least. Hollande has called this terrorism, and Islamic terrorism at that. The only people trying to muddy these waters are the smirking class liberals that haven't had anyone they care about run over, blown up or shot yet.

    • by tnk1 ( 899206 )

      Well, terrorism has a higher chance of coordinated secondary attacks. If it is just a random guy in a truck who cracked up and went bezerk, it would probably not concern the rest of France. If it is a terrorist attack, you may want to avoid public areas for a little while to be safe.

      Granted, an app for an attack already in practice seems about as likely to help as a duck and cover drill.

    • > Last I heard, there was considerable evidence that it might not have been terrorism; it might have just someone going apeshit and committing mass murder.

      What's the difference, exactly?

  • There are many problems that cannot be solved with the app. Not the terrorism.

    This app was a scam by design: there are little benefits of knowing of attack 15 minutes after it took place.

    Reality is that the app was just another project to skim money from government, like they have skimmed thousands of times before that. Remember the $2 million app that randomizes whether to go to left or to the right? Reality is that once money have been consumed, those who made profit moved on and they no longer care. Also

    • by swb ( 14022 )

      This app was a scam by design: there are little benefits of knowing of attack 15 minutes after it took place.

      I guess it depends on whether or not the attack duration is longer than 15 minutes. If a group of guys is roaming a downtown area with RPKs and grenades for an hour and a half, I might want to know what parts of town to avoid, even if they don't tell me for 30 minutes after it started.

      It might even be useful to know if you're not danger close, so you have some understanding why roads or closed or people are running away like it was the zombie apocalypse.

      Around here in the Midwest, we get weather alerts on

    • by Ogive17 ( 691899 ) on Friday July 15, 2016 @09:45AM (#52517745)

      Reality is that a single semi-automatic rifle would have been extremely effective in stopping the madman in Nice attack.

      I don't know how long it took that guy to plow through the crowd but I am quite positive no one in that crowd would have had the time, situational analysis, and space to end the threat without taking out more innocent bystanders.

      I'm not anti-gun, there are just very few people trained to respond with deadly force in traumatic situations. Your average citizen is not one of them. Your average citizen is going to protect their own life by getting the fuck out of the way.

      • This is the same point I try to make a lot.

        There's been a lot of research since WW2 in to what it takes to actually get somebody to be able to respond appropriately in a 'deadly force encounter.' A two day CCW course isn't it. By and large, police training isn't it, either.

        Unless you're doing regular training exercises, in real life, using something like simunition, you are very likely to simply be useless when something happens.

      • Reality is that a single semi-automatic rifle would have been extremely effective in stopping the madman in Nice attack.

        I don't know how long it took that guy to plow through the crowd but I am quite positive no one in that crowd would have had the time, situational analysis, and space to end the threat without taking out more innocent bystanders.

        Armed police was in the crowd, and armed police took him out within a few hundred seconds of the start of the attack.

        Still no reason for anyone else to carry arms, it was already covered by armed professionals, and they responded immediately.

      • I am quite positive no one in that crowd would have had the time, situational analysis, and space to end the threat without taking out more innocent bystanders.

        I'm not saying an armed public is the answer. But this is the wrong way to analyze the situation. The proper threshold isn't "without taking out more innocent bystanders." That's an impossible-to-achieve zero-failure standard.

        The proper threshold is: can someone end the threat, while on average taking out fewer innocent bystanders than would d

        • "train will derail and kill everyone if you do nothing, train will be saved if you switch it to a different track but it will run over a child walking on the tracks"

          "train will derail and might kill everyone if you do nothing". Ugh, what a whopper of a typo.

        • It's the "train will derail and kill everyone if you do nothing, train will be saved if you switch it to a different track but it will run over a child walking on the tracks" conundrum. People really dislike an innocent death happening as a consequence of their direct action, so much so that they'll prefer inaction even if it results in more deaths, and they'll criticize decisions by others to reduce the net fatality count at the cost of a few innocents.

          The problem with applying Philosophy 101 to real life

    • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Friday July 15, 2016 @10:27AM (#52518081)

      Reality is that the attacker was stopped by the first man with a firearm.

      Actually, no. Video made of the truck just getting started shows French police shooting at it. It continued on for at least a mile. One or two snap shots aren't going to have much change of stopping something like a truck. The truck stopped on its own, then they killed the driver.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Kjella ( 173770 )

      Reality is that the attacker was stopped by the first man with a firearm. Reality is that automatic and semi-automatic gun ownership just got another solid, not even a theoretical card, to use when defending the gun ownership from nutty gun fearing zealots. Reality is that a single semi-automatic rifle would have been extremely effective in stopping the madman in Nice attack.

      If he had an automatic rifle, would he need a truck? Just spray and pray, when it's packed with people you're going to hit somebody. And if you pull a gun, are you a terrorist or a good guy? During that police shooting in Dallas, you had 20-30 open carry activists in the crowd. How many of them pulled out their guns to try help shoot the bad guy? I'm guessing none, because they wanted to live. I'm sure there were many police officers along that parade, as France is still in a state of emergency. That doesn'

    • Reality is that a single semi-automatic rifle would have been extremely effective in stopping the madman in Nice attack.

      First you have to be in a sheltered position where you can make the shot cleanly and safely. Second you are aiming at a small moving target protected by tons of metal and laminated glass --- and quite probably in body armor. Third it is night. What lighting there is may be casting strange shadows ---- more confusing than helpful.

    • Reality is that automatic and semi-automatic gun ownership just got another solid, not even a theoretical card, to use when defending the gun ownership from nutty gun fearing zealots.

      Let's not get carried away. These were trained policemen shooting at the truck, not civilians.

      And even counting the latest terrorist attacks, the per capita murder rate in France is still seven times less than in the United States. Not to mention, the muslim population in France is around 10% of the entire population, which is way more than in the US.

      What are we supposed to believe? Guns and trucks don't kill people. Mostly American people kill people.

  • Missing The Point (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Afty0r ( 263037 ) on Friday July 15, 2016 @09:28AM (#52517619) Homepage
    The point of this app was to generate profit for the company developing it, not to do anything useful. To expect it to be useful is naive in the extreme.
  • by Lirodon ( 2847623 ) on Friday July 15, 2016 @10:49AM (#52518295)
    Reading about failures like this makes me appreciate that both Canada and the United States have mandatory systems for the interruption of programming across all broadcasters, regardless of platform, in the event of a public emergency. Apps can help disseminate information, but they should not be constitute the only distribution path besides the media.
  • "Would you kindly allow me to leave this bomb here? I apologize in advance for any possible inconvenience." Even though I understand Nice actually refers to city in France, this headline got me confused for a bit.
  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Friday July 15, 2016 @01:45PM (#52519709)

    Had this event happened in the US instead of France, our elected idiots would be running around in little circles because they can't blame it on guns this time.

    I suppose we would see legislation along the lines of No Fly No Drive or something equally stupid.

    The only thing positive to come out of this is the fact this provides irrefutable evidence that no matter how hard you try to ban a thing, folks will find ways to kill one another en masse.

    The problem is, and always will be, people.

  • Perhaps its meant for something else.

  • A madman running over people in a crowded street doesn't have to be a terrorist.

    In fact this accident looks a lot like what happened in Akihabara, Tokyo in 2008 where a guy ran over people with a rental truck. He was much less successful than the Nice killer, probably because the place was less crowded, so he stepped down and stabbed random people with a dagger. Absolutely no link with terrorism, just a madman, in the US he probably would have been a school shooter or something.

    Well, maybe he really is a te

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