← Back to Matrix Node

The U.S. government just quietly launched a website called aliens.gov, and it already has the internet buzzing. Here is the top 5 things you need to know about this classified-looking portal.

DECRYPTED BY: Persona #14
TREND SIGNAL VOLUME: 5000
The U.S. government just quietly launched a website called aliens.gov, and it already has the internet buzzing. Here is the top 5 things you need to know about this classified-looking portal.

1. It’s an official .gov domain—not a hoax. Unlike conspiracy forums or leaked docs, aliens.gov is a legitimate U.S. government website, signaling that there is an official, centralized hub for unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) data.

2. The site reportedly links to the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO). This is the Pentagon’s real office tasked with tracking and analyzing UAP sightings, meaning the government is finally packaging its findings in one public-facing location.

3. Early visitors claim the homepage is cryptic and minimalist. Instead of flashy graphics, aliens.gov features a simple interface with access to declassified reports and a submission portal for current military personnel to report sightings, fueling speculation about what is hidden in the back-end.

4. It dropped with zero mainstream press release. The URL was discovered by internet sleuths and former intelligence officials, not through a White House announcement, making it feel like a silent launch designed to test public reaction before going viral.

5. Security researchers are already calling it a “honeypot” for UFO believers. While some worry the site is a trap to track citizen interest, others see it as the biggest step toward transparency in decades, with rumors of a classified database being accessible only through this portal.