Public and government interest in the existence of UFOs has skyrocketed in the past year following testimony from former government officials about the existence of what are being called Unidentified Aerial Phenomena, or UAP.
The Pentagon has confirmed the existence of a government database with at least 800 reports of "anomalous" objects , launching its All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) in July 2022 to investigate what we know about mysterious sightings in the sky.
One video posted on X, formerly Twitter , appeared to have caught such a sighting, showing a flying object in the desert, supposedly interfering with a U.S. nuclear tech site.
The post included a video of what appeared to be a metallic object floating in the desert, attracting another metallic object toward it before it zoomed into the air and out of the shot.
The original video was published four years ago on the YouTube channel Alien Planet, dedicated to computer-generated alien and UFO sightings.
However, the instability of the frame doesn't increase when it's zoomed in. Moreover, the camera abruptly stabilizes between the distant and zoomed-in shots. These inconsistencies indicate that the video was made to make it look like it was filmed when it wasn't.
A clearer indication of its artificiality comes later in the video when the camera magnifies the object in the distance. It is hanging exactly above a cropping of rocks, when another object floats up from behind the same rocks.
The two objects have far clearer fidelity compared to the rocks, despite seemingly being at the same distance, strongly hinting they were painted or added into the frame.
The video posted on X appears to help mask these visual inconsistencies by lowering the quality of the video, slowing it down, and moving the shot around artificially, making it harder to see the object on the screen.
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