AT&T have announced that they will no longer support email to sms messages as of June 15, 2025. Our system uses this service for all notifications to users on the AT&T network. This includes mobile subscribers to AT&T, FirstNet, and Cricket. As a result, notifications will stop working at that time for a substantial number of Second Signal users.
While there are alternatives to send notifications to our mobile users on this network, transitioning to these alternatives would require us to nearly double our subscription pricing. At this time, many of our customers do not have the budget to continue service.
We deeply regret the loss of this valuable service.
All subscribers who have pre-paid for services beyond June 1st, 2025 will be refunded the portion of services for any period after that time.
For more information on AT&T's announcement, please see their article here.
Second Signal Helps Small Town Firefighters Save Lives and PropertyUsing cutting edge technology, Second Signal is helping fire departments across the country better respond to daytime emergencies. CUMBERLAND, Maine, Oct. 18 2007 -- Finding enough manpower during the day is getting more difficult each year for thousands of fire departments across the country. As communities change, call-responders working further away are less able to drop everything and come to the aid of their community. "What once were working towns are becoming bedroom communities. The brave men and women who volunteer just don't work as near by any more," says Andrew Pollack, founder of Second Signal. Pollack, a Lieutenant in his town of Cumberland, Maine, developed the technology to help bring some of those more distant firefighters back when they're really needed. "The solution is getting more information to people so they can make that decision to leave work knowing they're not wasting their time," Pollack explains. "When you work 20 miles away you can't just leave work for every false alarm or burnt pot roast. When you call in and hear the first guys on scene saying they've got a working structure fire, you know they need you -- even if you're not the first on scene." Second Signal automatically notifies members that something is up by sending a text message to their cell phones or pagers. When a member sees that message, they just call a local telephone number and can hear all of the radio traffic from when the call was dispatched, right up to the current moment. The recording skips over the time when the radio is quiet, so a member quickly catches up when they call in. The system has been in use in Cumberland, Maine for over two years now, and has recently begun expanding to other departments across the country. "I wouldn't dare not have this available to the crews now...," said Cumberland's Chief Daniel Small in a recent interview. More than 90 percent of U.S. fire departments rely on call-responders for some or all of their firefighters and nearly all are struggling with this manpower problem. Second Signal was designed to be practical and affordable for these departments. Second Signal is now available with local telephone access throughout most of the United States. For more information, visit their web site at http://www.SecondSignal.com. Contact: Andrew Pollack |
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