Telecommunications for Disaster Relief
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Telecommunications for Disaster Relief (TDR) is a proposal by the International Telecommunications Union to establish worldwide standards of interoperability and availability of emergency communications. The notion of establishing such standards was spurred in part by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and the subsequent tsunami which devastated Indonesia.
Reportedly, Verizon proposed that an international country code of +999 be set aside for use in development and research into TDR. As of 2005, there are no allocated phone numbers in that space.
[edit] External links
- ITU Workshop on Telecommunications for Disaster Relief
- Draft ITU-T Action Plan for Standardization on Telecommunications for Disaster Relief and Early Warning (TDR/EW)