‘Living Nostradamus’ warns six more prophecies have come true – including a crippling cyberattack on the Olympics
The ‘living Nostradamus’ has warned that more of his prophecies are coming true…
Brazilian ‘fortuneteller’ Athos Salomé, better known as ‘Nostradamus’, predicted ‘three days of darkness’ for 2024.
The self-proclaimed psychic now claims more of his predictions are coming true – as a result of the Microsoft outage that caused global chaos and brought society to a standstill.
The living ‘Nostradamus’, who named himself after the 16th century French astrologer and pharmacist of the same name, claims to have predicted the COVID pandemic.
He also said he predicted Elon Musk would buy Twitter, that Queen Elizabeth would die and that he would know the outcome of the European Championship football tournament.
Brazilian ‘fortuneteller’ Athos Salomé (pictured), better known as ‘Nostradamus’, predicted ‘three days of darkness’ for 2024
Salomé recently claimed to have predicted the cyberattack on systems at this year’s Paris Olympics… along with several other recent incidents.
Salomé said he pointed out that “events of such magnitude as the Olympic Games would be ideal targets of attack, capable of causing disruptions to the existing order.”
“It proves my hypothesis correctly when the French authorities acted quickly and increased their cybersecurity measures,” he added. “This is a further indication that there is a need for adequate and efficient measures for cyberspace protection during major global events.”
The ‘soothsayer’ says he was ‘right’ when he predicted the rise of ‘modular malware’ – which functions like a virtual Swiss army knife and can switch functions remotely.
“This malware can and will develop new modules on its own, making it impossible to counter with traditional security measures,” he said.
“Furthermore, my warnings about corporate espionage in the biotech and healthcare sectors are coming true, as North Korean hacker groups Kimsuky and Andariel target these sectors to fund Kim Jong-un’s policies.”
According to Salomé, the vulnerabilities in browsers ‘prove that his predictions about the continued behavior of hackers are true.’
The ‘fortuneteller’ claims he was confident that hackers would attack crypto exchanges to control digital assets and disrupt financial markets.
“This incident proves I was right: cryptocurrency platforms are vulnerable to cyberattacks and can impact financial markets.”