Nic Fildes, telecoms correspondent March 29, 2018 Print this page Experimental feature Listen to this article Play audio for this article Pause Experimental feature or Give us your feedback Thank you for your feedback. What do you think? I‘ll use it in the future I don‘t think I‘ll use it Please tell us why (optional) Send Feedback Natural disasters caused havoc in 2017. The United Nations calculates that earthquakes, floods and landslides affected 445m people and killed 8,000. The estimated economic impact was almost $139bn. The world’s nearly 5bn mobile phone users, however, are being drafted in to help — both in the aftermath of a disaster and to provide an early warning system. One of the first things that people want to do after disaster strikes is make contact with emergency services and loved ones. Several mobile operators are formalising their role at these times of stress. For example Telefónica, which operates in countries like Chile which have a high earthquake risk, has teamed up with Facebook to embed the social network’s “safety check” into its artificial intelligence platform Aura so that they can more easily let friends and family know that they are safe. Tigo El Salvador, a leading mobile phone operator, introduced a “zero rate” — where data for emergency communications do not count toward a customer’s bill — after an earthquake last June. In the Philippines, an area at high risk of tsunamis, mobile phone operator Smart sent out 10m texts and alerts to customers while… [Read full story]
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