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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">In the movie "Back to the Future," Doc Brown builds a time
machine into a Delorean.UniversalAn Iranian scientist has registered a time
machine that he says will work with 98 percent accuracy.Ali Razeghi registered
"The Aryayek Time Traveling Machine" with Iran's state-run Centre for Strategic
Inventions, The Telegraph reports.He said the machine would use algorithms
to predict the future of any individual, between five and eight years
into their future.Mr Razeghi, 27, reportedly told Fars news agency he had
been working on the project for the past 10 years."My invention easily
fits into the size of a personal computer case and can predict
details of the next five-eight years of the life of its users.
It will not take you into the future, it will bring the
future to you," he said.The Telegraph reports Mr Razeghi is the managing
director of Iran's Centre for Strategic Inventions, and that he has another
179 inventions registered in his name.He said the invention could help the
government in predicting military conflict, but he had been criticised for
trying to play God."This project is not against our religious values at
all. The Americans are trying to make this invention by spending millions
of dollars on it where I have already achieved it by a
fraction of the cost," he said."The reason that we are not launching
our prototype at this stage is that the Chinese will steal the
idea and produce it in millions overnight."Get more science an
new momentum after the
banking crisis in Cyprus pushed depositors there to find creative ways to
move money. Fink, the Argentine, favors bitcoins because he believes they
will insulate him from his country's high inflation. Others -- from Iranian
musicians to American auto dealers -- use the currency to dodge international
sanctions or reach new markets.But the anything-goes nature of Bitcoin has
also made it attractive to denizens of the Internet's dark side.One of
the most prominent destinations for bitcoins remains Silk Road, a black
market website where drug dealers advertise their wares in a consumer-friendly
atmosphere redolent of Amazon or eBay -- complete with a shopping cart
icon, a five-point rating system and voluminous user reviews. The site uses
Tor, an online anonymity network, to mask the location of its servers,
while bitcoin payments ensure there's no paper trail.One British user told
the AP he first got interested in Silk Road while he was
working in China, where he used the site to order banned books.
After moving to Japan, he turned to the site for an occasional
high."Buying recreational drugs in Japan is difficult, especially if you
don't know people from growing up there," said the user, who asked
for anonymity because he did not want his connection to Silk Road
to be publicly known.He warned that one of the site's drawbacks is
that the drugs can take weeks to arrive "so there's no spontaneity."Drug
dealers aren'
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