Eburacum
Senior Member.
By cherrypicking? I doubt that very much.That's how active radar works
By cherrypicking? I doubt that very much.That's how active radar works
Oh, but they are, in a trial, the public doesn't see most of the evidence collected, but it exists. You even have presumption of evidence, forbidding you to destroy any data that can be relevant, without even knowing if it exists, just on the potentialité of its existenceGood point, we can't know about photos/ videos of UFOs that aren't made public. Perhaps many exist.
But photos/ videos we don't know about aren't evidence (although they may become evidence if revealed later).
The Gendarmerie? (Many English-speakers are familiar with the term, but some incorrectly use it as a word for French police generally).
That's why they are in a paragraph explaining themYou could argue in favor of anything using those arguments, even things that are mutually exclusive.
If you want to accuse them of cherry picking, please address your critics to a report and send them to the SCU, I'd be really interested to read their responseBy cherrypicking? I doubt that very much.
I would also add that, in most explained GEIPAN cases (meaning cases where we know there was a something and not a hoax or a hallucination) there is no video at all. And when there is one, the quality is often poor.I see many opinions and few facts, critics can be directly forwarded to the SCU, they are very open to dialogue. I would advise to assemble the remarks in a report first, for ease of communication, I'm not sure forum posts or webpages are the most efficient way of communicating.
Edit: regarding your "remark", please try to take a picture of a bird mid flight next time you see one, but take a 15 seconds delay to simulate the shock of witnesses trying to understand what they see, and a 5 seconds delay to simulate the actual time of finding your phone while in a state of panic, and remember, it was 2008 phones. Then factor in peer pressure, do you really want to be exposed as someone who has the picture of a UFO, considering that whatever the quality of the picture you took some will always call you a hoaxer, and your job will surely be affected as you'll become "the guy that photographed a UFO". The best pictures of UFOs I've authentified and seen were sent by private citizens whom I verified the identity and they didn't want their pictures to go public, because many people are very agressive regarding that subject, an agressiveness and an irony, it seems to me, that shows through your message.
Yes; they both cherrypick from 2.5 million data points to find 187 'significant' returns, even though those returns are described as weak. We need better evidence than that.
That's how active radar works
Our thread on Stephenville is here
https://www.metabunk.org/threads/stephenville-texas-ufo-2008.13446/page-2#post-371988
There were several F16 planes flying around on that night; one likely explanation is that the witnesses saw some, or several of these planes at various times and moving in various directions.
Yep, same thing for me. When I see something in the sky, my first assumption is that it's prosaic, even if I still watch it for a bit to understand what I'm actually seeing. So if it suddenly started doing something very weird, there's a good chance I wouldn't be ready to record it in time.If I saw a strange light in the sky that I could not identify, I would surely bring my phone up and film it right away, I'd post it here or anywhere and have it full analyzed.
Problem is, nothing I ever saw was weird enough.
If I were to see something VERY weird, would I do the same thing? I don't know, if I'm in shock and awe, maybe there are chances I would't think about it?
This doesn't disprove the fact that it's "very convenient" that the best UFO cases have almost always little to no photo evidence substantiating the weirdest claims.
But I think it's something to be considered.
No, that's how noise works. Radar pareidolia.That's how active radar works
But this can be said of anything. For example, no photos or videos of fairies that we know of, what can you deduce from that? Is this fact evidence for or against the existence of fairies?No photos of video that we know of, you can't deduce a truth from a lack of information.
In your opinion, does this fully explain why we don't have authentic good videos of truly anomalous objects?There are indeed many practical reasons why getting an authenticated video good enough to prove that an object is truly anomalous is much harder than people assume.
You also don't want to turn away from it lest you miss something. A form of fascination.Yep, same thing for me. When I see something in the sky, my first assumption is that it's prosaic, even if I still watch it for a bit to understand what I'm actually seeing. So if it suddenly started doing something very weird, there's a good chance I wouldn't be ready to record it in time.
In my opinion, yes. But that is only my opinion, and I can't know for sure.In your opinion, does this fully explain why we don't have authentic good videos of truly anomalous objects?
Are you trying rhetorics on me? I said the lack of evidence isn't the proof of absence, not that it was a proof of existenceBut this can be said of anything. For example, no photos or videos of fairies that we know of, what can you deduce from that? Is this fact evidence for or against the existence of fairies?
I would add that this isn't a time definite problem. Even if the probability is low tomorrow, contact may happen in the future, the further the more likely. So examining possible contacts day by day is still a necessity, as it's what future is made of. And if it becomes proven that contact happened, then it doesn't cancel the fact that other future different contacts are likely.In my opinion, yes. But that is only my opinion, and I can't know for sure.
There may already be good UFO videos online, but the web is full of garbage, hoaxes, misidentifications, and videos with no context. Some potentially interesting cases may simply be unnoticed or poorly documented.
For example, I made a thread about an alleged flying saucer video from Moldova. We don't have enough information to conclude anything, but it shows that interesting videos may exist without being widely known.
However, if nothing stronger appears in the coming decades, it will become much harder to argue that we were just unlucky. At that point, the lack of solid evidence would become a stronger argument against the reality of UFOs.
For now, I still think that argument is weak.
Even if one wants to dispute the radar tracks selected by the MUFON/SCU study as evidence for a truly anomalous object, the study still matters for another reason.
It provides a detailed comparison between the witness reports, the timing, the directions of observation, and the known military and civilian aircraft in the area. On that basis, several key sightings do not fit with F-16s, flares, commercial aircraft, or other conventional explanations.
Facts are facts, furthermore when you have corroborative statements. We had a perfect example in Italy, a rocket made a catastrophic reentry. Some saw a meteor, some saw a cigar shaped UFO, some saw a rocket reentry. But they all saw something similar, and the event was real. It's just normal for the human mind to interpret data, and it has been extensively studied in psychology,
Of course, you realize that I said no such thing. Or even remotely close. It's not a good look putting words in someone's mouth."I didn't find any worthy, so all are bad, so I'll be the white knight proving that all are bad" but in doing so witnesses that are hesitant to show their proof don't want to be ashamed; specifically on a topic that is considered shamefull (you are crazy or delusional).
And how radar "angels" work, right? ("Angels" being classic slang for spurious returns, I have no idea if it is still current usage.)That's how active radar works
But photos/ videos we don't know about aren't evidence (although they may become evidence if revealed later).
Oh, but they are, in a trial, the public doesn't see most of the evidence collected, but it exists.
I see many opinions and few facts, critics can be directly forwarded to the SCU, they are very open to dialogue. I would advise to assemble the remarks in a report first, for ease of communication, I'm not sure forum posts or webpages are the most efficient way of communicating.
Edit: regarding your "remark", please try to take a picture of a bird mid flight next time you see one, but take a 15 seconds delay to simulate the shock of witnesses trying to understand what they see, and a 5 seconds delay to simulate the actual time of finding your phone while in a state of panic, and remember, it was 2008 phones. Then factor in peer pressure, do you really want to be exposed as someone who has the picture of a UFO, considering that whatever the quality of the picture you took some will always call you a hoaxer, and your job will surely be affected as you'll become "the guy that photographed a UFO". The best pictures of UFOs I've authentified and seen were sent by private citizens whom I verified the identity and they didn't want their pictures to go public, because many people are very agressive regarding that subject, an agressiveness and an irony, it seems to me, that shows through your message.
That's the most interesting (to me) thing in this thread! I've always wanted to see one of those Dutch East India Company phones!...my phone is from 2009, and it took under 5 seconds to get the phone out from my pocket, switch it into phone mode, wait for it to focus, and finally take the photo...
If you feel so strongly about Stephenville, please edit your critics in a report, and send them to the SCU, I'm sure they will be very glad to anwser any question.No. This is the standard UFO response when a flaw is pointed out.
And I'm not discussing the Stephnville case particularly, just using it as the example. The investigators claimed that 2 likely unrelated radar returns that normally would have been dismissed, where evidence of an accelerating UFO. This identification was based on 4 witnesses, all 30+ miles away, seeing differently described lights in the sky at a particular time in a particular direction. 2 of the witnesses were actively driving at dusk/night, so their sightings are glimpses while driving along. At least 1 witness gave 3 different times for his sighting, thus the investigators chose the claimed time that accorded with radar tracks they were trying to connect. Again, circular reasoning.
When this is pointed out, it is hand waved away and replaced with another claim:
Whether "several key sightings do not fit" with various prosaic explanations does not make the pieced together radar track evidence. Without the supposed radar evidence, that case is fairly straight forward. There were several sorties of F16 going to and from the nearby MOD, where some dropped very bright flares. The report only contains 8 witness accounts, so I'm not sure which ones are considered "key". All but Steve Allen's just describe lights in the sky, with some even commenting that they looked like flares. Others are from 30+ miles away and looking in a completely different direction.
It's a constant moving of the goal post. UFO investigators offer "proof" of a UFO being tracked by radar. When flaws in that proof are pointed out, it's onto a new claim. As for some of the "key sightings" not having conventional explanations, maybe it's because the sightings are flawed. As Mr. Babtiste pointed out above:
This is why witness testimony, particularly about vague things like lights in the sky, is often unreliable. People see things and interpret them in their own way. What a witness says they saw, and more importantly what they say they remembered seeing, which may very different from the actual event, can be a starting point for an investigation, but offers little in the way of evidence for aliens or their aliens spacecraft buzzing around.
As I did many times in my post, I added text inclusions to simplify the point of view as seen by an interlocutor. I'm sure you understood it was not a direct quote, interesting that you are trying to accuse me of misquoting you.Of course, you realize that I said no such thing. Or even remotely close. It's not a good look putting words in someone's mouth.
Surely, even if your premise ("...witnesses are hesitant to show their proof..." were true 95% of the time
(and I definitely don't think that that's anywhere near correct, but, for the sake of argument)
than 5% of thousands of claims would be a lot! I wrote "solid photographic & video evidence literally never happens"
because I am aware of zero...but surely you can point to 10 (but I'll settle for one!) truly solid video or photo.
I'm glad that you have such a self confidence, really, but what I explained comes from dozens of witness reports. But you ask a real question, I could run an analysis in a sub selection of data to check the average time of a witness taking a picture, and factor in the anomalousness of the case to see if there is a correlation, but I fear i would have to consider witnesses that spent the whole time looking at the object and realizing they didn't took the picture at the end, so I think it will be longer than 20 secs. I'm noting the idea on the side, it's a good one for a paper, thank you.If I saw something I thought was genuinely interesting, I know that on a phone from the late 2000s I'd have a photo taken within under 5 seconds. I know this, because I saw a very interestingly-illuminated cloud structure between two buildings as I was walking down the road the other evening, and my phone is from 2009, and it took under 5 seconds to get the phone out from my pocket, switch it into phone mode, wait for it to focus, and finally take the photo - not much slower than the time it took you to read that. I think you underestimate how long 20 seconds is.
I also know that if it was genuinely intersting, and unexplained, I'd want an explanation - the person coming up with a mundane explanation for it would be doing me a favour. And if there was no mundane explanation, then I would know that any and all claims that it was a hoax were blunt arrows, there could be *no* evidence presented to support such a claim because no such evidence exists, as it wasn't a hoax. Empty claims with no evidence can be dismissed no matter who makes them. The psychology you are describing sounds more like a pathology to me, or something done by someone do does actually have something to hide.
Yes, but the public doesn't have the same access to evidence than the jury. But society accepts that the judicial system acted lawfully, even if each member of the society didn't have access to the evidence himself to make his own opinion. For protecting private information, most of the evidence is kept away from the public, and the public accepts it. It is evidence nonetheless.I don't see how that analogy works.
If someone has photos/ video of (e/g.) a UFO, and doesn't share it, that material can't inform the opinion of others. It is not evidence for us.
It is only evidence in the narrow sense that it is a record for the owner. But if others saw it, they might have a different view of what is shown.
Evidence that cannot be examined is not evidence.
In legal proceedings, evidence is known to the people who collected and reviewed it, e.g. police and relevant legal professionals.
We have to be a bit careful about different legal systems, but in most Common Law jurisdictions a jury should not convict on the basis of evidence that has not been presented in court. Much potential evidence collected in connection with a criminal investigation might not be used in a prosecution, but by definition evidence used to secure a conviction has to have been submitted in court. The jurors are told not to seek information from elsewhere.
Yes, but we don't see it as noise, but as social indicator of the prevalence of the idea in the population, so even false positives and misintepretations can be used in meta analysesWell, in my case I was driving the first time and my new phone was in my glove compartment; I hadn't taken a picture with it yet. I don't know if I would have taken a picture if it was handy, as I don't know what would have happened if I did. Seeing something really strange, your mind wants to find a mundane explanation but can't. Wanting to see something strange and taking a picture of a plane, your mind will want to see aliens.
The second time with the capsule-shaped object, I didn't even have my phone on me, it was in the house.
You do have people who want to see aliens taking pictures of every light they see, creating a lot of noise. The number of real experiences is quite small.
Since the SCU report is merely a derivative rehash of the MUFON report, and makes exactly the same mistakes, then this would be fairly pointless.If you feel so strongly about Stephenville, please edit your critics in a report, and send them to the SCU, I'm sure they will be very glad to anwser any question.
Certainly, there can be different psychological inputs and reactions at play. As you can tell from my dinosaur phone, I'm not your average phone user, so all I can bring is anecdote. If you do have reports, then you must remember to take into consideration that noone was there timing the people who react with shock, and they may be grossly over-estimating how long they hesitated, as they might have dissociated under their autonomic hormonal response. I'd expect that to be well covered in the literature. Unfortunately this kind of thing is hard to do a high power experimental study on, as you can't isolate a test of the behaviour you're interested in without priming the subjects, which could change their response.I'm glad that you have such a self confidence, really, but what I explained comes from dozens of witness reports. But you ask a real question, I could run an analysis in a sub selection of data to check the average time of a witness taking a picture, and factor in the anomalousness of the case to see if there is a correlation, but I fear i would have to consider witnesses that spent the whole time looking at the object and realizing they didn't took the picture at the end, so I think it will be longer than 20 secs. I'm noting the idea on the side, it's a good one for a paper, thank you.
This is completely different to the recent Jersey Drone flap, where hundreds of witnesses posted their video clips directly to the internet (YouTube, TikTok, Facebook, ecetera), and there was very little apparent hesitation on the part of witnesses to go public. Things have changed; nowadays there are lots of people prepared to post their observations, and that gives us plenty to work with.In the canadian report 4% of witnesses reported their sighting to a non governmental organization, for an overall 9% of reporting among witnesses. And then you have to factor in those that what their report to be made public, which is even lower.
Back and forth between researchers is the essence of science, otherwise it's just publishing opinions. Did you send a report to the MUFON with your critics regarding their report?Since the SCU report is merely a derivative rehash of the MUFON report, and makes exactly the same mistakes, then this would be fairly pointless.
Absolutely, time perception by the witness is a really interesting topic ! Particularly under adrenal response.Certainly, there can be different psychological inputs and reactions at play. As you can tell from my dinosaur phone, I'm not your average phone user, so all I can bring is anecdote. If you do have reports, then you must remember to take into consideration that noone was there timing the people who react with shock, and they may be grossly over-estimating how long they hesitated, as they might have dissociated under their autonomic hormonal response. I'd expect that to be well covered in the literature. Unfortunately this kind of thing is hard to do a high power experimental study on, as you can't isolate a test of the behaviour you're interested in without priming the subjects, which could change their response.
We talked about it already in this thread, the witness reporting statistics during a UFO flap are well understood due to mass effect and reversed peer pressure (Did you see one too? Yes ? Cool ! How was it ? Mine was....) creating an established convention that the event actually happened and to be part of the group you had to see one (FOMO in a sense). But inside the many false positives, you will also have true reports and true old reports surfacing. It's not because most are doing mistakes (which is always true) that true data can't be recovered with the proper methods, and crossing the information with flight, astronomical, meteorological data.This is completely different to the recent Jersey Drone flap, where hundreds of witnesses posted their video clips directly to the internet (YouTube, TikTok, Facebook, ecetera), and there was very little apparent hesitation on the part of witnesses to go public. Things have changed; nowadays there are lots of people prepared to post their observations, and that gives us plenty to work with.
And the conclusion is inescapable; many observers have no idea what they are looking at. These 'drones' were nearly all distant planes and helicopters.
Well, in my case I was driving the first time and my new phone was in my glove compartment; I hadn't taken a picture with it yet. I don't know if I would have taken a picture if it was handy, as I don't know what would have happened if I did. Seeing something really strange, your mind wants to find a mundane explanation but can't. Wanting to see something strange and taking a picture of a plane, your mind will want to see aliens.
The second time with the capsule-shaped object, I didn't even have my phone on me, it was in the house.
You do have people who want to see aliens taking pictures of every light they see, creating a lot of noise. The number of real experiences is quite small.
So you discount the possibility that we do not have authentic good pictures of truly anomalous objects because no truly anomalous objects exist?In my opinion, yes. But that is only my opinion, and I can't know for sure.
Regarding what you said about the "amplitude" of what someone sees (I take that you mean the apparent size of the object), I would expect that most people seeing something very large, so, less likely to be a misinterpretation of something mundane, would be more likely to try to record it, than if seeing something small. My reason for assuming that is that a viewer would be more inclined to dismiss something small, as possibly mundane (and perhaps not worth recording), than something larger and easier to identify if it was mundane.I agree with this. I've seen many things in the sky (using binocs) which I've understood . Then when you see something odd, you try make sense of it, to justify what it is until there's a gradual/sudden realisation that it's odd. In my case, my confusion caused me to lower my binocs to look at it with the naked eye, I could not see it and then was not able to find it again with the binocs. This all occured in the space of about 10 seconds.
So for fleeting scenarios, I'd agree that not actively thinking of capturing a photo/video could be understandable.
If however, a sighting lasts multiple minutes, then I'd have to question why there is no evidence. Especially in this day and age, and I'd even be generous and say in the last 5 years where people have capable hardware.
I also think the amplitude of the sighting also carries weight, seeing a 5ft orb vs a football field in the sky obviously changes things - even for someone that has no interest in UAP's.
Are you trying rhetorics on me? I said the lack of evidence isn't the proof of absence, not that it was a proof of existence
No photos of video that we know of, you can't deduce a truth from a lack of information.
What is a "true report" and can you point to one that came out of the New Jersey drone flap?But inside the many false positives, you will also have true reports and true old reports surfacing.
Tim Printy's analysis of the Stephenville event and the MUFON report has been online for eighteen years, and yes, MUFON (or certain individuals associated with MUFON) have responded). Indeed, one individual from Texas MUFON was quite impressed and presented Printy's analysis in a meeting, but he seems to have been ostracised somewhat for this.Did you send a report to the MUFON with your critics regarding their report?
So many people complained about Cherry's little program that he was apparently canned by MUFON. This is no great surprise and he should have expected it.