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Biohacker seeking immortality afflicted with incurable 'stomach eating' disease

32 pointsby ferrythtoday at 4:16 PM35 commentsview on HN

Comments

cannonprtoday at 5:04 PM

To add some context, this is a relatively common form of gastritis impacting depending on location 3-5% of the population called Autoimmune Gastritis. Now his biohacking might be related it might not, the issue with the guy is that he does too many interventions at the same time so it’s hard to really tell what’s going on. He also has a core belief of equating looking younger with his interventions working, to his defence he also runs more rigorous analysis on his body. Overall he isn’t the most interesting bio hacker out there, but he is the loudest.

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culitoday at 5:24 PM

Someone should make a website showing the oldest living biohackers. Presenting it as a sort of leaderboard

edit: I don't actually ethically endorse this. I was moreso poking fun at the morbidity of the biohacking influencer space which invites people to obsess over an influencer's health and inevitably turns into something gruesome when said influencer has a tragic health outcome.

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nemo136today at 5:20 PM

His idea would be cool if not for the lindy effect: each one of his "tests" has a somewhat low probability of extending his life by a few months / years.

However each of his tests, as they are new, also has a smaller probability of having ruin effect: killing him or leaving him disabled in the process. Multiplying the treatments increases significantly the downside risks (1 failure is enough) while the positive will not compound (you will need many of them to work to see a significant effect).

chabestoday at 5:28 PM

Having a blood boy will not save you from inevitable death

arjietoday at 5:20 PM

It seems like a high-prevalence low-impact disease. Considering how much he self-scans it’s no surprise he found one of these. The cancers that he could get as a result are not particularly dangerous and lifespan is barely affected by it.

Seems interesting but not consequential.

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rglovertoday at 5:01 PM

This is heartbreaking to see (from the doc about this guy, he seemed to genuinely believe this was a good idea). A good warning about the limits of control humans have over things (and why brute-forcing it can often lead to bad outcomes).

theplumbertoday at 5:01 PM

I wonder if the methods he used are any better than all sorts of incantations or ancient “cures”…a worthy goal that proved money can’t solve the ultimate disease…yet!

LoganDarktoday at 5:03 PM

I thought the article was talking about his blood transfusions to explain any part of how he ended up with this disease but no, he just has it (for some reason) as a result of something that happened at some point.

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Jemmtoday at 5:01 PM

I completely support people who want to be guinea pigs for health science.

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everyonetoday at 5:26 PM

This is absolutely hilarious. lolollol .. aw life is good.

hoppptoday at 4:57 PM

Now this news is everywhere and people seem to be mocking him, but he is a good guy.

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therealdkztoday at 4:53 PM

[dead]

nullsanitytoday at 5:07 PM

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trilogictoday at 5:06 PM

There is nothing more valuable than doing what you believe and love in the life. Especially when doing no harm, furthermore trying to solve a great problem with great benefits for society.

Is incredible but understandable, many don´t get it.

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