MUFON's '3i/ATLAS: What is it REALLY?' article captures the UFO community's attempt to understand an interstellar object whose unusual origin made it a magnet for speculation.
The question is fair as long as it remains evidence-led. Interstellar objects are rare, and scientists naturally want to know their composition, trajectory, activity, and origin system.
The leap from rare object to artificial craft is much larger. That claim would require anomalous acceleration, emissions, structure, maneuvering, or other evidence inconsistent with known cometary behavior.
The article is useful as a snapshot of public curiosity before later SETI-focused reports found no convincing evidence of alien technology.
It belongs in the archive because 3I/ATLAS shows how modern UFO attention can attach to astronomy news. The strongest coverage keeps wonder alive while letting data constrain the answer.