Author | Asher(@Asher_ 0210)
Last night, the U.S. Department of Defense officially launched a UFO archive disclosure website and released the first batch of government documents related to UAPs, unidentified flying objects, and suspected extraterrestrial life. According to public reports, this initial release consists of over 160 documents, including videos, photos, mission records, sighting reports, communication logs, and historical archives, involving multiple U.S. federal agencies such as NASA, the FBI, and the Department of Defense.
This batch of documents is not just abstract government reports; it contains a large amount of specific imagery and historical records. Among them, an Apollo mission spacecraft once captured three anomalous light points suspended above the Moon from lunar orbit, and Apollo 17 communication logs also contain discussions among astronauts about a mysterious object approaching the spacecraft. Another set of materials indicates that unexplained unidentified objects have appeared in places like the United Arab Emirates, Greece, and Iraq.
Even more widely disseminated are the unresolved cases in the files with specific visuals. A jellyfish-like object once appeared over the UAE; some materials document suspected luminous spheres and unidentified flying objects with shapes resembling an eight-pointed star; the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation also once captured an anomalous target near a U.S. military aircraft. A picture released by the U.S. Department of Defense also shows that an unidentified object appeared over the western U.S. in September 2025.
A picture released by the U.S. Department of Defense claims to show an unidentified object appearing over the western U.S. in September 2025 (Source: U.S. Department of Defense)
Compared to mere text reports, these images and eyewitness records are more likely to cause UFO discussions to spread rapidly, making this release appear more like a concentrated display of "declassified archives."
However, the answer given by the prediction market is much cooler than social media. After the initial UFO files were released, the event probability for "Will the U.S. confirm the existence of aliens by December 31, 2026" on the prediction market predict.fun did not surge significantly due to this explosive news. The market did not directly interpret this disclosure as "the U.S. is about to confirm the existence of aliens." The probability remains only 20%.
Source: https://predict.fun/market/will-the-us-confirm-that-aliens-exist-before-2027
So, why did this UFO file release not significantly change the prediction market's judgment?
The Prediction Market Bets Not on Whether Aliens Exist, But on Whether the U.S. Government Will Acknowledge It
Upon seeing the 20% probability, many people's first reaction might be that the prediction market believes the probability of aliens existing is only 20%. But this misunderstands the market itself.
Markets like predict.fun do not actually trade on whether extraterrestrial life exists in the universe, but on whether the U.S. government will explicitly confirm the existence of extraterrestrial life or alien technology before 11:59 PM EST on December 31, 2026. According to the market's settlement rules, only if the U.S. President, a member of the U.S. Cabinet, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, or a U.S. federal agency explicitly makes such a statement will the market settle to Yes; otherwise, it will settle to No. The primary settlement sources are official U.S. government information, with reference also made to consensus formed by credible media reports.
This rule is crucial. It means that a video of an unidentified flying object is not enough, a blurry photo is not enough, an astronaut communication log is not enough, and even military acknowledgment that some phenomena are temporarily unexplained is not enough. What can truly trigger a Yes is the U.S. government stating clearly enough, acknowledging that extraterrestrial life or alien technology indeed exists.
File disclosure merely places more materials before the public; official confirmation means the government is endorsing the conclusion. The former generates discussion, the latter triggers settlement. Between them lies a line that is very difficult to cross.
Archive Disclosure Is Not Answer Announcement
This UFO file release is indeed not an ordinary information update. The U.S. Department of Defense concentratedly released relevant materials through a dedicated website and indicated that more files will continue to be released in batches subsequently. For the public, this means that UFO and UAP materials previously scattered across different agencies, eras, and archival systems are being reorganized into an official portal. It makes the discussion more centralized and makes it easier for outsiders to track what materials the U.S. government actually possesses.
However, judging from the currently disclosed content, this batch of files seems more like placing historical sightings, anomalous imagery, mission records, and old archives before the public, rather than providing a unified explanation for these materials. The U.S. Department of Defense did not directly tell the world "what this is," but released more unresolved cases, leaving the judgment space to the public.
This places the release in a subtle position. It increases transparency but does not change the nature of the events. UFO discussions thus gain more material, but these materials primarily expand the questions themselves rather than pushing unexplained phenomena toward extraterrestrial confirmation.
For the prediction market, this file release is more like a new starting point for observation, rather than evidence sufficient to change the odds. It brings the UFO issue back to the main stage and gives subsequent file updates trading value; but the initial materials are still dominated by historical records, sighting reports, and unexplained imagery. What the market is truly waiting for are higher-level, harder-to-ignore signals closer to an official conclusion.
Is 20% an Underestimation or an Overestimation?
From an emotional perspective, 20% might seem low. After all, the release of UFO files has entered an official cadence, with more materials still to be released. If clearer military videos, higher-level internal records appear in the future, or a federal agency provides a more direct judgment, the Yes price could still be rapidly reassessed.
But from a market pricing perspective, 20% is not that low. Because this market trades not on an open-ended question, but one with a clear deadline. What the market must judge is not just whether the U.S. will confirm the existence of extraterrestrial life or alien technology, but also whether such confirmation will happen before the end of 2026.
Time itself is a threshold. Even if files continue to be released, even if more unresolved cases enter public view, it does not mean the U.S. government will complete evidence review, internal coordination, political assessment, and deliver a sufficiently clear conclusion within a few months. For an official system, continuing to disclose materials is one thing; completing a definitive statement within a short timeframe is another.
Therefore, the current 20% probability is more like a tail-priced assessment with a time discount. It does not deny that subsequent files may continue to create volatility, but it also indicates that the market does not believe the initial release materials have fundamentally changed the judgment of the event. For traders, the file disclosure itself is not scarce; what is truly scarce are the key signals that could push for an official conclusion before the end of this year. Before such signals appear, the Yes price is unlikely to be significantly pushed up by archive updates alone.
When UFOs Enter the Prediction Market, Truth Begins to Have a Price
The most noteworthy aspect of this event is no longer just a particular photo, a video clip, or some jellyfish-shaped object. UFO discussions have long lingered between emotion, belief, and conspiracy narratives. Believers see more clues in every file release, while skeptics continue to emphasize insufficient evidence, misidentification, and technical noise. The two sides have argued for years but can hardly truly persuade each other, because they are often not discussing the same question.
The prediction market pulls this issue one step closer to reality. It does not try to answer whether other life exists in the universe, but narrows the question to a more specific level—will the U.S. government explicitly acknowledge the existence of extraterrestrial life or alien technology before the end of this year? It turns what was originally a difficult-to-ground imagination into an event that can be traded, settled, and constantly adjusted with changing information.
So, this ~20% probability is not a final judgment on whether extraterrestrial life exists, but the market's judgment on whether U.S. officials will relent before the end of the year. It truly reflects traders' comprehensive assessment of the evidence chain, official statements, and the time window.
When humanity's oldest mystery enters the prediction market, truth is no longer just awaited and discussed; it also begins to be priced. UFOs may still hang in the sky, but the question of when they will be officially confirmed, when they will turn from unexplained phenomena into factual conclusions, has landed in the betting pool.









