In this case, the abduction appears to have occurred around 9-10 hours before the alert was issued.
CHP (California Highway Patrol) also links to their X/Twitter account in their AMBER alerts, but they don't appear to have a real site for information.
I do generally vote almost every election, even the local (school board / parks district / water district / sewer district) ones. I did find it hard to keep up with the issues and candidates when I was always travelling for work.
@lxo I did re-download it 2-3 years ago with the idea of giving it another try, but none of my contacts would even touch it ... and I couldn't see any obvious differences.
Now mind you, I've used it primarily on mobile devices (KDE used to have a Ring-compatible program but I never got it to do anything.)
@lxo They did tack-on E2EE. It is off in any public room, but on by default in private rooms (this probably depends on the client, but with the main Element clients, this is the case).
@lxo I can't agree about Jami, mostly because the actual experience of trying to use it is abysmal. Regular people will quickly abandon it (I know because I tried to get my family members to use it) and go back to centralized proprietary corporate ("corpocentric") services. See: https://gnusocial.jp/notice/7755187
There's a lot of work still to be done before it is at a point where I'd recommend it for anything but techies trying to improve it.
I'm also not sure Jami is available on iOS.
The rest is generally true. There is also Matrix, an ongoing fustercluck, but one that seems generally similar to its corpocentric competition. But one should spend some time in Element-Android and Element-iOS before recommending.
(1) When people today create an account on a communication service, they expect to be able to use that account on multiple devices, even at the same time. It was my experience that ONE device would receive a message, and for the other devices, it was like they didn't exist. I don't recall whether it was the same device every time, but I suspect that to be the case.
(2) When people use communication services, such as a chat or instant messaging service, they fully expect to be able to send messages to their contacts even while those contacts are offline, and that their contact will receive any messages sent their way once they log in. But Ring / Jami didn't do this. In fact, at that time, I don't ever recall seeing an indicator telling whether a particular contact was online. I had to just send and wait for an error message.
(3) Slow network. It was difficult to have a text conversation, because one didn't know whether the person on the other end was just slow to respond. At any rate, anything one sent or received seemed to take an exaggerated time to reach its destination. Remember when using Tor felt like getting dial-up, with the latency of the most distant satellites? Yeah, that's what GNU Ring / GNU Jami used to feel like.
(4) Missing information, such as presence indicators (I believe that one has been fixed), message delivery indicators (important when the network is slow). There were lots of others, but I don't remember anymore.
(5) I also remember the client software being ugly. It was so ugly that I wondered whether someone found a way to use Gtk+ on Android. (As I've said for over 20 years, Gtk is so butt-ugly that I can't understand why any non-GNOME desktops or software still use it.)
I think it is a good idea to accept cryptocurrency payments, but I think trusting PayPal is going to bite them hard ... and they'll likely blame cryptocurrencies for it.
A GNU+Linux bearing nomad migrating across a Windows-centric desert. I save the world from incompetent headquarters IT folks. I invite comment and discussion, but I dislike arguing.