DisclosureOS
A shared way to write down what is known about a case — so researchers, journalists, and institutions can read, check, and build on the same record.
What DisclosureOS is
Free, open building blocks that anyone can inspect and any tool or archive can be built on. No license fees, no gatekeeper, no single vendor in control.
A shared vocabulary for UAP cases: what a record holds, what counts as a signal, how possible explanations are organized, and how every assessment points back to its evidence.
The Disclosure Index shows what all of this looks like in practice: real cases from official government releases, presented so anyone can read them — built entirely on this same foundation.
The Standard
Every UAP case becomes an Observation: one structured record with a shared vocabulary for when, where, what was seen, who saw it, and what evidence exists.
30 top-level fields
Twelve defined signatures — six technology, six biologics — that say precisely what was anomalous about a case and how strong the evidence for each one is.
12 observables · 5 evidence tiers
A catalog of explanations, from the mundane to the exotic, where every possible cause has its own permanent place in one shared tree — and a flag for what science can test.
96 hypotheses · 82 testable
Every assessment of a case is recorded as a claim: who made it, when, why, and the evidence behind it. When evaluators disagree, competing claims sit side by side instead of overwriting each other.
4 evidence types · 2 claim shapes
Two separate questions, scored separately: how completely is a case documented, and how compelling is what the evidence shows? Opinion lives here — never in the record.
2 axes · 226 fields measured
Have CSV, JSON, or database rows? Map your fields, validate your output, and see exactly what is missing — all in one guided workspace.