AI-Driven UFO Classification in Canada, Inspired by the Galileo Project, as Public Interest Grows and Calls for a Public Monitoring Agency Intensify

To the point

Chris Rutkowski says AI could help distinguish birds, planes, or satellites from unknown sky objects, referencing Canada’s 2025 UFO Survey which logged 1,052 sightings (mostly nocturnal lights and about 3% unexplained) across provinces, noting Ontario typically leads and Calgary tops cities, mentioning Ufology Research’s 35 years of data but gaps due to some groups withholding information, highlighting the 1967 Falcon Lake case in Manitoba with Stefan Michalak’s sketch and Stan Michalak’s submission as Canada’s best documented incident, and noting a push for a public UFO‑monitoring agency after a review by the Office of the Chief Science Advisor raised airspace and sovereignty concerns, with about one in ten Canadians saying they have seen a UFO.

UFO researcher in Manitoba supports using AI tracking to uncover whats really going on | CBC News
cbc.ca

UFO researcher in Manitoba supports using AI tracking to uncover whats really going on | CBC News

Artificial intelligence is going to make it easier to spot whether a bird, a plane or an otherworldly creature is in the sky, Canadas top UFO expert says, as Canadians continue to report sightings of unidentified flying objects.