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Related: About this forumHow Phones Alerted Millions Before Quakes Shook Venezuela
How Phones Alerted Millions Before Quakes Shook Venezuela
By Amy Graff and Martín González Gómez June 27, 2026
Jose Flores was driving with his family to see Toy Story 5 on Wednesday in Caracas, Venezuela, when a loud earthquake alert went off on his wifes Google Android phone. Six seconds later, he felt the earth starting to shake.
Venezuela does not have a national early warning system of its own, but people with Android phones received alerts from Googles Earthquake Alerts system, which can pull data from more than two billion phones equipped with built-in accelerometers. The same sensor that detects rotation on the screen can also sense vibrations from seismic waves.
Three seconds after the quake started underground
Seismic waves reached the surface and were picked up by phones.
Phones detecting seismic activity

Google said the system, which is available in nearly 100 countries, sent warnings that reached 11.4 million people on Wednesday, giving users seconds or up to two minutes notice before back-to-back powerful earthquakes struck.
Several countries, including Japan, Mexico, Canada and the United States, have government-operated early warning systems. These largely rely on widespread regional networks of underground sensors that detect earthquakes and can send alerts to most phones iPhone or Android via government alert settings that are often enabled by default.
When earthquakes hit, they send out two types of waves that travel at different speeds. The fast-moving and milder primary waves, or P-waves, travel at four miles per second and are less likely to cause destruction. The slower and stronger secondary waves, or S-waves, travel at about half that speed and produce shaking.
{snip}
By Amy Graff and Martín González Gómez June 27, 2026
Jose Flores was driving with his family to see Toy Story 5 on Wednesday in Caracas, Venezuela, when a loud earthquake alert went off on his wifes Google Android phone. Six seconds later, he felt the earth starting to shake.
Venezuela does not have a national early warning system of its own, but people with Android phones received alerts from Googles Earthquake Alerts system, which can pull data from more than two billion phones equipped with built-in accelerometers. The same sensor that detects rotation on the screen can also sense vibrations from seismic waves.
Three seconds after the quake started underground
Seismic waves reached the surface and were picked up by phones.
Phones detecting seismic activity

Google said the system, which is available in nearly 100 countries, sent warnings that reached 11.4 million people on Wednesday, giving users seconds or up to two minutes notice before back-to-back powerful earthquakes struck.
Several countries, including Japan, Mexico, Canada and the United States, have government-operated early warning systems. These largely rely on widespread regional networks of underground sensors that detect earthquakes and can send alerts to most phones iPhone or Android via government alert settings that are often enabled by default.
When earthquakes hit, they send out two types of waves that travel at different speeds. The fast-moving and milder primary waves, or P-waves, travel at four miles per second and are less likely to cause destruction. The slower and stronger secondary waves, or S-waves, travel at about half that speed and produce shaking.
{snip}
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How Phones Alerted Millions Before Quakes Shook Venezuela (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
5 hrs ago
OP
I received my FIRST California earthquake alert, ironically, on the same day as the Venezuela earthquake
Brother Buzz
4 min ago
#2
Lovie777
(24,518 posts)1. Yes, I know California have that alert system on cell phones..............
experienced one about a year ago, maybe 5 second warning. We have to be prepared and if it is a fairly sizable earthquake, the gas must be shut off at individuals locations and for gawd sake's no smoking. Avoid tall structure and cracks on the ground. If you're seen earthquake disaster movies, and the recent videos of Valenzuela, it's time to pray.
Brother Buzz
(40,631 posts)2. I received my FIRST California earthquake alert, ironically, on the same day as the Venezuela earthquake
I was like, what, what, and sat inside trying to process what I received. Zero information on that who, what, where thingy, and thought they might have been hacked. The message was time stamped 8:10, and it took ten minutes searching before the California earthquake hit the internet.