This video was captured by an ISS video watcher. The object, or shadow, is moving too fast to be a plane, so it is either space debris, a satellite in lower orbit than the ISS or the shadow of the ISS on the surface of the storm. Or, of course, it could be something of unknown origin. In any case, it’s a great catch by this observer!

Possible unknown, no way to evaluate further.
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This video shows two extremely fast objects passing in front of a single engine aircraft. It was shot in Argentina in 2017. It is not a computer graphic and the objects are moving too fast to be ordinary drones or birds. That leaves unknown objects. But there are questions: why did the pilot happen to be filming at just that moment? Was he hanging a cellphone out of the cockpit? Why? There is no indication that the camera follows the fast-moving objects, but that actually adds to the possibility that this might be authentic. The object would almost certainly not have been picked up by the naked eye, especially in a windy cockpit.

This video records a possible unknown.
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The image pictured here was allegedly taken at the China Lake Naval Weapons Station in 2007. We have had it on file for some time. We can find no evidence of photoshopping, but at the same time, the photographer is anonymous and there is no way to verify the fact that the image was even taken at China Lake, or where it was taken. In addition, it has become so difficult to determine finally and absolutely whether or not something like this, which is a still that has been videoed, is hoaxed, we simply cannot be sure.
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Over the past few years the rise of clickthrough monetization has spawned a cottage industry of fake UFO sites on YouTube and made it much harder to find real UFO video. Thus we have become more discriminating than ever, being as careful as we can to avoid the fakes and mistakes. We also don’t publish fuzzy nighttime video, largely because there is no way to tell anything about it.
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