Boo.Iran: No, We Don't Have a 'Time Machine'
  <http://abcnews.go.com/> By Lee Ferran | ABC News – Fri, Apr 12,
2013 1:11 PM EDT
    *  [Iran: No, We Don't Have a 'Time Machine' (ABC News)] 
<http://gma.yahoo.com/photos/iran-no-dont-time-machine-photo-171157953--\
abc-news-topstories.html>






In a shocking revelation that's sure to disappoint "Back to the Future"
fans around the globe, an Iranian official has been forced to deny that
an inventor from the Islamic nation has registered a "time machine" with
the state.

"Making scientific claims is free for all, but registration of these
claims as inventions should undergo certain legal stages based on
scientific proofs and evidence," Iran's Deputy Minister of Science,
Research and Technology Mohammad Mehdinejad Nouri said today, according
to Iran's semi-officialFars News Agency. "Such a claim has not been
registered in Iran's State Organization for Registration for Strategic
Inventions."

Nouri's announcement in Fars - also reported by Iran's PressTV - came
days after Fars ran a bizarre story
<http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2013/04/11/fake_fake_news_the_irani\
an_time_machine>  in which 27-year-old Iranian inventor Ali Razeqi
reportedly claimed to have registered the "Aryayek Time Traveling
Machine." The young man's definition of "time travel" is a far reach
fromMarty McFly's, however, as he said his device is only meant to allow
the user to predict the "next five to eight years of the life of its
users" with up to 98 percent accuracy.

"It will not take you into the future, it will bring the future to you,"
Razeqi said, according to today's Fars report. No flux capacitor here.

Razeqi's original story, which appeared on Fars' Farsi-language site,
mysteriously vanished from the web Thursday, according to The Washington
Post
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/worldviews/wp/2013/04/11/what-time-\
machine-iranian-state-media-quietly-deletes-a-report-that-iran-had-built\
-one/> , but not before it gained a curious following on social media
and with some skeptical Western news outlets - apparently enough to
prompt Nouri's public response.

Foreign Policy noted
<http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2013/04/11/fake_fake_news_the_irani\
an_time_machine>  that beyond the major claim of the original article
about a watered-down "time machine," some of the details in the report
raised enough questions that their reporter concluded, "If this story is
true at all, it's actually just about one obscure crank saying
ridiculous things - a phenomenon hardly unique to Iran."

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