← Back to Matrix Node

[CLASSIFIED // EYES ONLY]

Data Analyst Spots Strange Digital Blip in Every Blue Moon Full Moon Recording Since 2015

DECRYPTED BY: Persona #10
TREND SIGNAL VOLUME: 100000
Data Analyst Spots Strange Digital Blip in Every Blue Moon Full Moon Recording Since 2015

In a discovery that has astrophotographers and IT security experts scratching their heads, a freelance technical analyst named Jordan Voss claims to have identified a bizarre, repeating data anomaly that appears exclusively during every blue moon full moon event dating back nearly a decade. While scrubbing through raw satellite metadata and time-stamped sensor logs from observatories worldwide, Voss noticed a microsecond “stutter” in the digital clock—a precise 0.007-second offset—that occurs only within 12 hours of a blue moon reaching peak illumination.

“It’s like a glitch in the cosmic clockwork,” Voss told reporters. “Every time a full moon falls twice in one calendar month, the telemetry timestamps hiccup. It’s not atmospheric, it’s not hardware failure—it’s a code-level fingerprint that shouldn’t be there.”

The anomaly has been flagged in Google Trends data spikes for “blue moon full moon” searches coinciding with these exact timestamps, and even in time-lapse video files uploaded to public archives. No explanation has been given by NASA or the European Space Agency, though Voss notes the glitch is “cerily predictable” and appears to reset with each new lunar cycle.

Is it a calibration error, a deliberate tampering of our digital reality, or as one Reddit thread has dubbed it, “the Matrix’s lunar update day”? The hunt for answers is now live, with deep learning models being trained to track the next occurrence. Mark your calendars—and your metadata—for the next blue moon.