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Twitter Communications Earth NASA Social Networks

Scientists Live-Tweet Chilling Faux Asteroid Impact Scare 72

The world's top asteroid experts are gathering on Monday, April 29 at the 2019 Planetary Defense Conference in Washington D.C. to take part in a hypothetical asteroid impact exercise that will test how Earth responds to the threat of a potentially devastating space rock. CNET reports: NASA's Planetary Defense Coordination Office developed the exercise along with the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency. "The point is to investigate how NEO observers, space agency officials, emergency managers, decision makers, and citizens might respond to an actual impact prediction and evolving information," NASA said. The ESA Operations Twitter account is now live-tweeting the entire scenario, from the discovery of the asteroid (named 2019PDC) to the increasingly grim odds it might hit Earth. The first tweet sounds innocuous. It's a casual mention of international news reports confirming the asteroid's discovery.

The team is appending each tweet with the all-caps hashtag #FICTIONALEVENT so no one will freak out. It's still sobering to follow the events, which recently worsened from a 1 in 250 chance of impact to 1 in 100. ESA Operations will continue to update the plot in the coming week. Participants will receive daily briefings and must role-play the responses from astronomers, space agencies and governments. In reality, we know of no imminent threats from asteroids, but NASA is constantly tracking their movements through space.
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Scientists Live-Tweet Chilling Faux Asteroid Impact Scare

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  • by grep -v '.*' * ( 780312 ) on Saturday April 27, 2019 @02:18AM (#58499756)
    #FICTIONALEVENT my A$@. They just don't want us to panic while they launch their spaceships.

    Do you REALLY think those are nukes they're launching into outer space to stop it? Naaa, it's the illuminati -- they've know about this for YEARS. Just see When Worlds Collide [imdb.com] or 2012 [imdb.com] for a practice-run preview.

    I'm heading out to start shadowing Elon Musk RIGHT NOW. Heck, that car he launched earlier? He's probably IN that car RIGHT NOW-- we're all just watching pre-recorded stuff and stuff he's beamed back just to convince us that he's still around. Wouldn't want the Tesla stock to crash if we found out he'd bailed, would he?
  • But by using Twitter, rather than the broadcast radio, most will know it's fictional.
    • And with the hashtag #FICTIONALEVENT should be a clue.

      "The point is to investigate how NEO observers, space agency officials, emergency managers, decision makers, and citizens might respond to an actual impact prediction and evolving information,"

      Of course this tells them nothing about how people would react if it were real. To truly test that they need to go full Orson Wells. Over all media. No warning that it's fake. Then they could analyze the resultant panic and it would be accurate. Everyone knowing i
      • To truly test that they need to go full Orson Wells. Over all media. No warning that it's fake.

        Except Orson Welles didn't do that. He warned that it was fake at regular intervals. People blamed him for their panic anyway because they didn't listen long enough.

      • And with the hashtag #FICTIONALEVENT should be a clue.

        "The point is to investigate how NEO observers, space agency officials, emergency managers, decision makers, and citizens might respond to an actual impact prediction and evolving information,"

        I think it is a conspiracy to eliminate flat earthers, anti-vaxxers, 9-11 truthers and moon landing hoaxers.

        The same people who dismiss real events are going to latch on to #FICTIONALEVENT as 100 percent truth, and remove themselves from the gene pool.

    • H.G. Wells wasn't a radio broadcaster, Orson Welles re-wrote his story for radio. Welles also applied #FICTIONALEVENT tags at every act break, but a few people failed to listen long enough to hear the announcements that it was fiction. Wouldn't surprise me if there are equally many people who don't even read all the way to the end of a tweet.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Someone could get hurt. These people acted in an irresponsible way. What if there's a panic? We need to send a strong message, authorities should proceed to make high-profile arrests and anyone involved should have their degrees revoked permanently with no appeal.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      What if there is a panic ... ... Well, *what if* one is a moron and panics... Don't blame that idiocy on anybody but yourself!

      And frankly... if you are SO freakin *retarded* ... like literally mentally retarded ... that you take *anything* on Twitter seriously ... then please just let tee doctors catch you and put you back in that rubber cell with the spirals and numerology drawn all over the walls and floor!

  • I think they overestimate the intelligence of the average active Twitter user.
    They are going to FREAK OUT! OMG WOW!

  • The team is appending each tweet with the all-caps hashtag #FICTIONALEVENT so no one will freak out.

    Don't they know that all-caps, especially without spaces, is harder to read than CamelCaps?

  • It got my hopes up for a minute. Then I saw the #fictionalevent tag.

    Oh sweet meteor of death.
    Fall upon us and deliver us in fire
    To peace everlasting

  • There was an earlier such fiction, The Big Eye , by Max Ehrlich, 1960.

    The idea is also expressed in the fossil record (notably the Cretaceous extinction),
    and lunar craters, and a variety of other nonfiction sources.

    The fictions aren't as scary as the nonfictions.

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