Unidentified anomalous/ aerial phenomena (UAP) reporting has intensified public and governmental attention, yet scientific adjudication remains stalled because most released materials lack the documentation required for independent verification or reanalysis. Astrobiology has increasingly emphasized the search for technosignatures—measurable manifestations of non-human technology across electromagnetic, chemical, and potentially physical domains—and a small but consequential subset of government-sourced UAP observations plausibly intersects with this category, insofar as some reports involve structured emissions, extreme kinematics, or multi-sensor correlations that, if validated, would exceed known terrestrial platforms. This commentary argues that progress in both UAP studies and technosignature science hinges less on interpretive claims than on enforceable procedural standards. Specifically, it proposes: (a) a compact, machine-readable metadata core accompanying any cited or released UAP evidence; (b) a publicly described investigative playbook incorporating calibrated sensor characterization, cross-sensor correlation, and cryptographically protected chains of custody; and (c) an independent, tiered archival mechanism enabling auditable preservation and controlled scientific access. Together, these measures would convert episodic media artifacts into reproducible research objects, align anomalous aerospace observations with established astrobiological data practices, and create a defensible pathway for evaluating near-Earth candidate technosignatures without presupposing exotic explanations.
James Houran (Sat,) studied this question.