November 14, 2008
Virginia Tech's Text-Message Alert System Partly Failed During False Alarm
A report of what sounded like gunshots prompted Virginia Tech to use its text-message emergency-alert system on Thursday for the first time, but the system failed to deliver all of the messages.
The sounds turned out to have come from cartridges from a nail gun, which campus police suspect someone exploded manually by slamming a dumpster lid on them. Echoes of the explosions were amplified because the incident occurred between two high-rise dormitories. But until officials determined the cause, the university police secured the entrances of the buildings and searched them extensively, even using a dog trained to sniff out explosives.
While that investigation was under way, the university used a multipronged emergency-alert system that it set up in the aftermath of a massacre on the campus in April 2007, when a gunman killed 32 people and then himself.
Officials say that most of the new alert systems worked well. Messages were successfully sent to students, professors, and staff members via university e-mail, on LED display boards in some classrooms, and on university Web sites. But a system designed to send messages to cellphones and other mobile devices, which relies on a product from a company called 3n, failed to deliver to all of the people who had signed up for it, according to university officials.
The 3n system, which is known on the campus as VT Alerts, is designed to send warnings by text message, by voice message, or to non-university e-mail accounts, depending on which method users have chosen. More than 30,000 people affiliated with Virginia Tech have signed up for VT Alerts.
“The system froze up,” Larry Hincker, associate vice president for university relations at Virginia Tech, said in an interview today. “We’re very disappointed, and I am not happy in the slightest at this level of service.”
At about 1:40 p.m. on Thursday, Virginia Tech sent the following message via all of its alert systems:
“Police are investigating reported sounds of gunshots in Pritchard Hall. Building is secured. No access in or out. Police searching room by room. Virginia Tech PD and BlacsburgPD are investigating reported sounds of gunshots in Pritchard Hall. Building is secured. No access in or out. Police searching room by room. Two people reported hearing sounds like gunfire at about 1 pm.”
But as the system was sending out the text messages, the status display on a Web page the university uses to monitor the VT Alerts system stopped working. “Their system hung up — it crashed,” said Mr. Hincker.
The university sent two other messages with updates on the incident later in the afternoon, but the VT Alerts system failed to deliver any of those messages, said Mr. Hincker.
The alert company, 3n, said in a statement that a problem with its Oracle database “initially slowed down the system’s performance,” but that the system was fully restored by 4:25 p.m.
“Fine, thanks, but I was all through by then,” said Mr. Hincker, when hearing the 3n statement. “By then our event was over.” —Jeffrey R. Young
Posted on Friday November 14, 2008 | Permalink |Comments
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3n, you got a lotta ‘splaining to do!…and I’m sure the questions will be VERY pointed.
— ap Nov 14, 04:56 PM #
Yup … looks like they should alert themselves to a pending loss of business.
— Bob Nov 14, 06:21 PM #
For the cellular networks to fail is one thing, or to have other tactical problems like not enough students registered, but for the software delivering such crucial alerts to freeze: that’s unacceptable.
— Lach Nov 21, 01:19 PM #
what a bunch of libwhiners. YOU AND YOU ALONE are responsible for your personal safety—you can’t dump this responsibility on Police etc for if you do, you’ve been DEAD FOUR MINUTES before their donut eatin’ azzez show up!
WAKE UP SHEEP!
— nr Nov 28, 12:12 AM #
sukku a message for you
— suganthi Dec 17, 10:52 PM #