Japan Grinds To A Halt Following False 9.1 Earthquake Warning

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Tokyo shaken by false megaquake alert

Japan Grinds To A Halt Following False 9.1 Earthquake Warning

Japan comes to standstill on Monday after an official agency issued a false 9.1 earthquake warning  causing thousands of people to panic.

The Japanese meteorological agency sent out a warning that a massive earthquake was about to strike the capital Kanto Region which is home to 40 million people.

RT reports:

The warning was issued at 5:09pm local time on Monday, and quickly relayed to mobile apps that warned millions of Tokyo residents about an earthquake measuring 7 out of 7 on the scale used within the country – equivalent to 9.1 on the Richter scale, and as bad or worse than the Tohoku disaster of 2011.

Bullet trains began to stop services, in accordance with regulations, and NTT Docomo, the country’s largest mobile provider, reported that for 15 minutes the network was overloaded and went down.

But then – nothing happened.

“The quake that had been predicted has not taken place. It’s an error on our part. We sincerely apologize,” said Japan’s Meteorological Agency.

The organization said that it was the biggest false alarm since the current modern warning system was introduced back in 2007, and said the erroneous reading was produced by electrical noise. Interference from electrical currents disturbing the sensor or cable is a frequent cause of false alarms in early-warning systems, though equipment is usually designed to filter out the noise.

The agency said it warned most apps about the false positive, and they were able to cancel the alert in time, but one major app, Yurekuru, still sent out the alert.

Social media was quickly filled with reactions, from relief, to confusion to anger at officials and app developers.

“When I saw the Yurekuru app screen, I prepared to die,” read one tweet.

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