Friday, 1 November 2024
I had previously mentioned efforts on bringing public emergency and weather alerts to free software and free infrastructure, which was also my initial motivation to work on push notifications. With that moving forward it’s time to explain a bit more what’s happening there.
FOSS Public Alert Server
As part of the initial push notification work I had written a simple prototype server which aggregates alerts from about a hundred countries and allows clients to subscribe to be notified about alerts in a given area of interest.
With the push notification client and server parts for KDE released and deployed, that’s now the next thing to tackle.
After teaming up with FOSS Warn (a free alternative to the proprietary emergency and weather alert apps in Germany), who need the same kind of infrastructure there’s now even NLnet funding to turn this into production-ready software.
Work is going to happen in this repository on KDE’s Gitlab instance, and can be followed on this Mastodon account.
Common Alerting Protocol (CAP)
For this to scale globally we need standardized data models, data formats and protocols. And thankfully those exist in form of OASIS’ Common Alerting Protocol (CAP) since many years and are widely in use.
CAP describes an XML format for alert messages, covering categorization, severity, certainty, urgency, affected area, and multi-lingual descriptions and instructions.
Build on top of that are CAP feeds, which are basically RSS or Atom feeds of CAP alert messages.
There’s also a bunch of national- or agency-specific profiles which for example define additional information elements or specify the use of existing fields more precisely for their use-case.
From a technical point of view none of that is particularly challenging, we already have support for CAP alerts in KWeatherCore for example.
CAP is widespread for internal use in various international, national or sub-national emergency warning systems, for connecting alerting authorities with e.g. media broadcast or mobile network providers. In many countries CAP feeds are also publicly available, which is the interesting part for us here.
CAP Workshop
After having gotten in touch with other people working in this area we got invited to the CAP Workshop that happened last week, a rather unassuming name for a three day international conference with national delegations from more than 120 countries, several UN agencies and NGOs like the International Red Cross/Crescent, and quite a bit more formal than what we are used to from other events.
Unfortunately I couldn’t be there in person and only followed this online, but even that provided quite some interesting insights.
- OASIS’ work on extended event codes, which should help with better display and filtering of alerts in client applications.
- Several talks covered the “usability” of alerts, ie. how to word/present warnings so that they are understood by everyone and so that they result in the intended reaction. Much of this is in the hands of the alert issuers, but client software can help here as well, e.g. regarding accessibility (TTS, both visual and audible notifications, translations and understandable language in general, etc).
- Google showed the various places where they integrate alerts in their products: displayed on maps, discoverable via search, location-dependent push notifications, integrated with weather forecasts and in routing before entering an affected area. Can be inspiration for what we could do as well.
- A talk presented work on Mexico’s earthquake early warning system. As earthquakes can’t be predicted this uses the fact that an alert can outrace the shockwave and thus might still reach people further away in time (same as tsunami warnings work, just at a much shorter timescale). Their estimate from a simulation of past earthquakes was 10 seconds making a difference of 10k lives. That’s a level of responsiveness our current CAP feed polling approach is not going to be able to reach, this would need direct listening to the alert radio signals.
- There’s several CAP feeds that aren’t publicly available yet, whenever such a case came up there was push for changing that in the following Q&A session. Good, we need that.
How you can help
There’s plenty of things to do here. On the software development side there’s getting the server code production ready and deployed, building monitoring tools for that and turning the demo app into a reuable client library and integrating that in places where it makes sense.
Equally important though is finding more CAP feeds and in some cases additional data sets to resolve area codes used in the alerts to geographic polygons. This is something that often needs local knowledge and understanding the local languages. And where there are no CAP feeds yet, nagging your local authorities to change that also helps.
We should soon get a dedicated Matrix channel for coordinating this, and we’ll be at 38C3 and FOSDEM 2025 if you want to talk about this in person.