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alerts

An alert is a notice that signals that a condition requiring attention has occurred or is imminent. Alerts can be generated by software, hardware, or humans and can target operators, end users, or the general public. In computing, alerts are commonly produced by monitoring and incident management systems in response to performance thresholds or failures.

Alert types include technical system alerts (service outages, high error rates, resource exhaustion), user-facing alerts (in-application

Key design considerations: timely and actionable messages, clear priority levels, reliable routing and escalation, auditing, and

Standards and history: In emergency management, the Common Alerting Protocol (CAP) enables interoperable alerts across agencies

banners,
emails),
and
public
safety
or
emergency
alerts
(weather
warnings,
civil
alerts).
Delivery
channels
include
push
notifications,
email,
SMS,
phone
calls,
and
sirens,
often
combined
for
redundancy.
privacy.
To
avoid
alert
fatigue,
systems
implement
deduplication,
suppression
during
quiet
hours,
acknowledgment
workflows,
and
escalation
to
on-call
staff.
Accessibility
and
localization
are
important.
and
channels.
In
IT,
alerts
are
generated
by
monitoring
tools
(for
example,
metric-based
triggers)
and
delivered
through
incident
response
platforms;
effective
alerting
supports
rapid
triage,
root
cause
analysis,
and
accountability.