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Fact-Check: Did the U.S. Government Actually Launch an 'Aliens.gov Website' for UFO Reporting? A viral claim sweeping social media alleges the U.S. government has launched a new official website, aliens.gov, where citizens can report extraterrestrial encounters and access classified files on UFOs. The rumor suggests the site went live on December 17, 2024, offering a "direct hotline to the Pentagon's UAP task force." Here's the truth: The claim is false. While the Department of Defense has a UAP (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena) reporting hub at uapreporting.gov, no verified aliens.gov website exists as of this date. The supposed URL redirects to a generic government placeholder page, and no press release from the White House, NASA, or Pentagon confirms this launch. Social media posts circulating screenshots of a "sleek aliens.gov interface" are using doctored images from a speculative article on a satirical news site. The Pentagon's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), which handles official UAP reports, has publicly stated it has no plans for an aliens.gov domain. In summary: This is not a real government initiative—it's a viral hoax combining Sci-Fi excitement with a nostalgic dot-gov domain trick. Always check the source, and remember: until you see an official .gov link from a trusted agency, keep your tin foil hat at arm's length.

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Fact-Check: Did the U.S. Government Actually Launch an 'Aliens.gov Website' for UFO Reporting? A viral claim sweeping social media alleges the U.S. government has launched a new official website, aliens.gov, where citizens can report extraterrestrial encounters and access classified files on UFOs. The rumor suggests the site went live on December 17, 2024, offering a "direct hotline to the Pentagon's UAP task force." Here's the truth: The claim is false. While the Department of Defense has a UAP (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena) reporting hub at uapreporting.gov, no verified aliens.gov website exists as of this date. The supposed URL redirects to a generic government placeholder page, and no press release from the White House, NASA, or Pentagon confirms this launch. Social media posts circulating screenshots of a "sleek aliens.gov interface" are using doctored images from a speculative article on a satirical news site. The Pentagon's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), which handles official UAP reports, has publicly stated it has no plans for an aliens.gov domain. In summary: This is not a real government initiative—it's a viral hoax combining Sci-Fi excitement with a nostalgic dot-gov domain trick. Always check the source, and remember: until you see an official .gov link from a trusted agency, keep your tin foil hat at arm's length.