Data anomaly reveals full moon may 2026 causing worldwide digital clock drift—scientists baffled
Global timekeepers are scrambling after a bizarre glitch emerged in atomic clock systems synchronized with satellite networks, all linked to the upcoming full moon may 2026. Analysts noticed that on May 23, 2026, at precisely 1:23 AM UTC, timestamp logs from over 14,000 connected devices in 29 countries jumped forward by 0.47 seconds—then snapped back exactly 1,023 milliseconds later. The kicker? That millisecond count mirrors the precise gravitational pull ratio recorded during the full moon may 2026 in a classified 1999 NASA experiment. “It’s like reality stuttered,” said Dr. Elise Harrow, a temporal data forensics lead who declined to name her employer. “We’re calling it a glitch in the matrix, but the pattern suggests the moon’s orbit this May is interacting with something we can’t measure—yet.” Conspiracy forums have since exploded with claims that the full moon may 2026 is a reset point, though no official explanation has been given.