Evidence / Updated 2026-06-21 / 6 min read

UFO hoaxes: how to spot staged sightings, fake videos, and weak claims

Hoaxes are part of UFO history. A serious archive documents them because they teach how evidence fails.

Key points

  1. A hoax can still be useful as a comparison case.
  2. Red flags include missing originals, anonymous sources, dramatic edits, and claims that grow after attention arrives.

What a hoax teaches

A confirmed hoax is not just junk data. It shows how ordinary materials, social media amplification, witness expectation, and missing chain of custody can produce a mystery. Keeping hoaxes in the archive helps readers compare weak evidence with stronger cases and avoid repeating the same mistakes.

FAQ

Should hoaxes be deleted from a UFO archive?

No. They should be labeled clearly and used to teach evidence standards.

Sources