![]() Twenty percent of the DAO’s treasury would remunerate the “core team” and “anybody from anywhere can contribute and thus become a co-owner of the first time machine in the history of humanity.” If enough fellow time machine enthusiasts can be enlisted, it would be co-owned and run by a decentralized autonomous organization. Supposedly, the machine is to be built in Thailand, where the 64-year-old professor behind the concept, Preecha Yupapin, is based. ![]() Next, a “full-fledged time machine able to carry passengers will be built.” The first stage, it said, would be a prototype that “will be able to send to the future or to the past information rather than material objects,” costing around $3 million. The release described a full roadmap for the project. ![]() Nevertheless, peer-reviewed! I exclaimed to myself and my empty life. (To be quite honest, I have no clue whether that paper has anything whatsoever to do with time travel.) The theory behind it is described in a few papers published in peer-reviewed journals (which means it has been approved by independent experts)."Īs an example of these independent expert reviews, the release linked to a paper in something called Chinese Optics Letters. It went on: “Quite recently, in 2022, a team of scientists from South East Asia invented a time machine, whose work is based on relativistic electrodynamics and quantum effects. “The DAO’s core team intends to raise funds to enable a Thai professor to realize his invention.” “A Newly Created DAO Aims at Building a Time Machine,” the release began, understatedly. So you can imagine my squeal of porcine delight when I came across a mysterious press release dispatched by one Alex Polischuk, a tech enthusiast based in Kyiv, advertising something that looked an awful lot like a solution to all my ills: Mine has been a life of abject, miserable failure, countless unforced errors, and if I could have just a second shot, as it were, maybe I would still be with her…
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