Facebook adds Amber alerts to find missing kids (podcast)
The program will be opt-in and you will only get alerts about children missing in your state or other states you designate.Also, according to Allen, Amber alerts are only used for the most serious cases, where local law enforcement believes the child is in immediate danger and where there is good descriptive information that people can look for, such as an automobile and license plate. Fortunately, these alerts are rare.To sign-up for Amber alerts on Facebook go to Facebook.com/AMBERAlert, pick your state, and click the Like button at the top. You can also add that page to your favorites and suggest it to your friends. At any time, you can visit your state's page by adding your state's initials to the URL such as Facebook.com/AmberAlertNY.Ernie Allen, CEO of the National Center for Missing & Exploited ChildrenNCMEC.orgAmber alerts for your state will show up in your news feed along with all the other items, but if you have a lot of Facebook friends you might miss them if you're not looking."It doesn't get priority over other feeds," said Facebook's Washington, D.C., policy staffer Adam Conner but, he added, "the hope is it will be so important that people will share it immediately and it will see a full viral effect."Allen agrees. "One of our hopes is that because Facebook is so viral and there is such an opportunity for people to mobilize and communicate with their friends that very quickly this information can reach a huge number of people and bring more kids home."Disclosures: I serve without pay on the board of directors of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children and am co-director of ConnectSafely.org which receives financial support from Facebook. For more, click below to listen to my eight-minute interview with NCMEC CEO Ernie AllenListen nowYour browser does not support the audio element.Subscribe now:iTunes (audio) |RSS (audio)