Odigo reported that, two hours before the
September 11, 2001 attacks, two of their employees who were working in an Odigo office in
Herzliya Pituah, a city near
Tel Aviv, received a hostile English electronic instant message non-specifically threatening them that a terrorist attack would happen. They did not mention this to their employer until after they heard reports of a terrorist attack in the
United States on the news, after which they informed the company's management. One of Odigo's
New York offices was then situated within a mile of the
World Trade Center complex. However, the threatening message did not mention the location of an attack. The company took the initiative in tracking down the originating
IP address of the message, giving the information to the
FBI, so that the FBI could track down the
Internet service provider, and the actual sender of the original message. Using the "people-search" function, Odigo users can send anonymous messages anywhere in the world to other users, who they can find based on demographics or location. According to
The Washington Post, the message declared "that some sort of attack was about to take place. The notes ended with an anti-Semitic slur. The messages said 'something big was going to happen in a certain amount of time'". ==See also==