Hawaii Unveils Website aliens.gov to Handle Flood of UFO/Triangle Sighting Reports; Here Are 5 Things You Need to Know
- The legitimacy of the sightings is being taken seriously by state officials. Following a 30% spike in reported sightings of silent, low-flying black triangles over the Pacific, Hawaii’s Department of Defense launched this dedicated, secure portal. It is designed to process high-volume reports, vetting data for potential non-human origins or advanced terrestrial threats.
- The portal is open to all, but has a specific reporting process. You do not just email a tip. The site uses a standardized triage system called "Project Birdcage." Witnesses must submit three key pieces of data: a detailed narrative, a unique signal frequency reading (if captured), and a digital signature to prevent false hoax reports, which have already crashed similar sites.
- Authorities preemptively apologized for the website's cryptic appearance. The site launched with a plain text "E.T. Phone Home" message and a single interactive questionnaire. Officials state the minimalist design is intentional to prevent server overload and to filter out joke submissions, though it has already been labeled "the most ominous government domain since the last pandemic."
- A massive uptick in reports involving "sonic silence" has triggered a national security review. While Hawaii is ground zero, the database is being shared with the UAP Task Force. The most alarming pattern involves aircraft sightings where no engine noise is recorded, even by naval radar miles away, suggesting advanced cloaking technology or atmospheric displacement.
- The immediate consequence is a surge in amateur astronomy groups. The "aliens.gov" site includes a public map (with redacted coordinates) showing active "high-interest zones" around Mauna Kea and the tourist-heavy Kona coast. This has led to a 400% increase in telescope sales and nightly sky-watch parties, turning local beaches into de facto research stations.