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The argument for AM appears to be: the vast majority of adults will receive an emergency broadcast through their cellphone, but what happens if some event has already occurred which disabled large portions of the cellular network (which itself is an obvious target to create havoc)?
I'm fine with using AM as a redundant system for alerts.
Maybe make it more useful though for people in the car? I don't need an AM button I'm never going to touch. Instead have it monitor whatever the emergency broadcast frequencies are automatically, and put something on screen when there is an alert. That would make it a useful "modern" feature as opposed to appearing as a legacy holdover.
I haven't been following the situation, but it sounds like we haven't even really managed to get terrestrial digital broadcast radio functioning all that well for audio. Things have kinda fragmented into three separate standards (HD Radio in the US, and Digital Audio Broadcasting and Digital Radio Mondiale in Europe).
I think that if it's going to reach the point of mandating inclusion of newer radios, it might be preferable to sit everyone down and come up with some kind of broadly-acceptable single standard before we start baking it into legislation.
Also, if we're gonna have a way of talking to the car's computer remotely, for displaying alerts or whatnot, I'd rather that the protocol be cryptographically-secured from the get-go and that the modules be hardened as best we can. I don't really want to deal with little Jimmy with a $10 USB radio and a laptop dicking up autos at scale.
There isn't a way to do it, digitally. It's all radio waves. The lower the frequency, the longer the wavelength, the less information it can carry, but the longer it can travel and get picked up on an antenna. AM operates and can have audio heard/understood at a much lower frequency than a digital signal. AM operates in the KHz range. FM is in Mhz, and digital radio operates in Mhz, as well. Specifically, digital radio is broadcast at around 175Mhz, on the low end; while AM radio is around 1,000 Khz.
Thing is, it takes 1,000Khz to equal 1Mhz. That means that digital radio signal is flinging out data around 175 times more than the AM frequencies could, so it can't reliably transfer nearly as far. There's also a hard line on digital signal interpretation. Once there's a threshold hit for not picking up enough signal to fully interpret it, you drop straight to getting nothing interpreted. It's like how now that all tv signals are digital, so you either get a picture that looks perfect, or you get nothing. Back in the analog days of television you would often get fuzzy pictures and audio. The TV was able to interpret whatever signal it did manage to get, even if it wasn't all of the signal.
Also, anything cryptographically secure will be reverse engineered in a few years. If the keys have to be cycled, then all old radios will no longer work.
Loads of examples of DRM being broken (iPhone jailbreaks, Nintendo switch emulators).
How long were DVDs around before they were cracked? 2-3 years?
Nintendo switch emulators came out a year or so after the switch was released.