The US Government just registered Aliens.gov: "Stay tuned."
The Trump administration has quietly secured the domain Aliens.gov, and naturally, everyone has questions.
Federal registry records confirm the domain was picked up this week. The agency behind it is CISA, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which handles all .gov domain registrations on behalf of federal bodies.
As of right now, visiting Aliens.gov leads nowhere. The site is blank, there's no content, and no official statement has been made about what it's actually for.
The White House response was... interesting
When Decrypt News asked for comment, White House principal deputy press secretary Anna Kelly simply said to "stay tuned," reportedly accompanied by an alien emoji. Take that however you want.
About a month ago, President Trump announced he would direct federal agencies to start identifying and releasing government records connected to alien life, UFOs, and unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs).
That announcement followed former President Obama making waves on a podcast by stating that aliens were "real," a remark he later clarified was about statistical probability rather than any kind of hard evidence.
Trump has said he personally doesn't know whether extraterrestrial life exists, but he keeps bringing it up in public, which has only fueled speculation about potential disclosures.
The Pentagon already has a dedicated UAP office
Before anyone gets too excited, it's worth pointing out that the US military already runs an office specifically for this kind of thing. The All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) was established in 2022 and serves as the Defense Department's main hub for UAP reports and investigations. AARO has consistently stated it hasn't found any proof of extraterrestrial beings or technology, though some cases remain unresolved due to gaps in available data.
On top of that, the National Archives is separately working through a legally mandated process of collecting and publishing UAP related documents on a rolling basis.
So what will Aliens.gov actually be?
That's the million dollar question, and right now nobody has an answer. There's been no indication whether the site will host declassified UAP records, function as a public reporting tool, or serve some entirely different purpose. Federal agencies regularly register domains well in advance of actually using them, and sometimes just to stop anyone else from grabbing them.
For now, Aliens.gov is little more than a blank page with very suggestive branding and a whole lot of unanswered questions.
