>
- Ring is offering a $1 million reward for images of a real alien life form
- The company will be holding the contest until November 3 at 11:59 PM ET
- READ MORE: Maryland has had nearly 2,000 UFO sightings since 1995
<!–
<!–
<!– <!–
<!–
<!–
<!–
Ring cameras capture everything from heartwarming reunions to suspicious visitors, but now the company hopes the system will prove that aliens exist.
The Amazon-owned company is offering a grand prize of $1 million to a US resident who provides “unaltered scientific evidence of a genuine alien life form.”
The deadline is November 3 at 11:59 PM ET, and entries will be analyzed by a Space and Extraterrestrial Expert.
The competition comes as countless videos claiming to show extraterrestrial activity have flooded the internet – but most sightings turned out to be meteors falling from the sky.
Ring is offering a $1 million grand prize to a US resident who provides “unaltered scientific evidence of a genuine alien life form.”
“For nearly 100 years, scientists, experts, and average homeowners have been sharing stories and video clips of alien sightings,” Ring shared in the announcement.
‘With new observations and further evidence that life forms may exist outside Earth’s atmosphere, there is a possibility that extraterrestrial activity could be happening right on your front door.
“Customers around the world capture life’s unexpected and wonderful moments through their Ring Video Doorbells and cameras. Now you could be rewarded for seeing something extraterrestrial.”
The contest is open only to legal U.S. residents 18 years of age or older.
There are two ways to enter. The first is to submit “scientific evidence recorded by a Ring device documenting an alien.”
The second option is to submit one video, up to one minute long, that features “someone or something related to aliens.”
A green fireball captured through the Louisiana sky in July was captured on a Ring camera – and caused UFO panic among locals who believe it could have been a sign of aliens
“An entry using OPTION TWO may depict aliens in an unrealistic manner and use artificial aids such as costumes or accessories, man-made vehicles, makeup, props, computer graphics, digital effects and/or other artificial means,” said Ring.
Option Two entries will be judged on creativity, visual appeal and humor.
If evidence of extraterrestrial activity is brought forward, that person will receive the grand prize an annuity of $50,000 per year for 20 years.
One incident captured on a Ring camera in July raised fears of an alien invasion.
Footage from the Ring doorbell was captured as a bright emerald orb hovered over the horizon at 4:30 a.m. on July 14 in Gretna, across the Mississippi River from New Orleans.
A 17-second clip from the security device begins with a look at a dark, sleepy suburban street with no signs of movement.
Suddenly, a green Great Gatsby-like light appears from the distance, and within a few seconds appears to shoot closer to the camera from behind a house.
It lights up the entire sky bright white before disappearing into the night.
AccuWeather shared the clip on Twitter and described the sighting as a “meteor” – although many people are convinced it was an alien sighting.
Others reposted the videos on social media and speculated about possible alien life.
“That’s not a meteor, that’s an alien ship invading our space and time,” someone said of the doorbell footage.
“UFO must have stopped to get a poboy,” someone else joked, referring to a New Orleans meat and baguette sandwich native to Louisiana.