'Living Nostradamus' warns six more prophecies have come true - including crippling cyber attack on the Olympics

'Living Nostradamus' has warned that more of his prophecies are coming true...

Brazilian 'fortune teller' Athos Salomé, better known as 'Nostradamus', predicted 'three days of darkness' for 2024.

The self-proclaimed psychic has now claimed more of his prophecies are coming true - in light of the Microsoft outage that caused worldwide chaos and brought society to a standstill.

Living 'Nostradamus', who named himself after the French astrologer and apothecary from the 1500s of the same name, claims that he predicted the COVID pandemic.

He also says he foresaw Elon Musk buying Twitter, Queen Elizabeth's death and the result of the Euro's football tournament. 

Brazilian 'fortune teller' Athos Salomé(pictured), better known as 'Nostradamus', predicted 'three days of darkness' for 2024

Brazilian 'fortune teller' Athos Salomé(pictured), better known as 'Nostradamus', predicted 'three days of darkness' for 2024

Most recently, Salomé claims that he predicted the cyber attack on systems at the Paris Olympics this year... along with multiple other recent incidents. 

Salomé said he pointed out that 'events of such magnitude like Olympics would be the ideal attack targets, capable of causing disturbances in the existing order.'

'It correctly demonstrates my hypothesis when the French authorities acted quickly and increased its cybersecurity measures,' he added. 'This is further indication that there is need for adequate and efficient measures of cyberspace protection during significant global occasions.'

The 'fortune teller' says he 'was right' when he predicted the rise of 'modular malware' - which functions like a virtual Swiss knife and is capable of switching functions remotely. 

'This malware can and will develop new modules independently, 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 industries to fund Kim Jong-un's policies.'

Salomé says that browser vulnerabilities 'proves that his predictions about the continued behavior of hackers are true.'

The 'fortune teller' claims that he was certain that hackers would target cryptocurrency exchanges to control digital assets and disrupt financial markets. 

'This incident proves I was right, cryptocurrency platforms are susceptible to cyber attacks and can influence financial markets.'