19 comments

  • cannonpr38 minutes ago
    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.
    • Waterluvian28 minutes ago
      Whenever I look up diseases and it reports a statistic such as "3-5%" I often feel like either I must not be interpreting it correctly, or it is so region-biased as to not be useful for how I'm consuming the data. Because it's hard to reconcile that apparently in the ballpark of 1 in 20 people have this?
      • somenameforme10 minutes ago
        It seems extremely common as people age. Your body just starts to break down as we get older and this is one, amongst many, ways that this manifests. A quick search suggests it shows up in about 50% of people over 70. [1]<p>[1] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov&#x2F;articles&#x2F;PMC11879357&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov&#x2F;articles&#x2F;PMC11879357&#x2F;</a>
      • Melatonic15 minutes ago
        Lot of these are a spectrum. 3 to 5% might have a mild form that&#x27;s aggravated by super spicy food or something but otherwise not very noticeable.<p>And then maybe a percentage of those people have a more debilitating version ?
    • rtkwe9 minutes ago
      He&#x27;s also one of the more bizarre publicly, with him using his son as a blood bag. Not unique but the publicity of it was a bit unusual.
    • iLoveOncall11 minutes ago
      &gt; He also has a core belief of equating looking younger with his interventions working<p>And he looks pretty much exactly his age.
  • culi18 minutes ago
    Someone should make a website showing the oldest living biohackers. Presenting it as a sort of leaderboard<p>edit: I don&#x27;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&#x27;s health and inevitably turns into something gruesome when said influencer has a tragic health outcome.
    • pixel_popping15 minutes ago
      Honestly, great idea, hope someone interested reads this.
  • Melatonic8 minutes ago
    These people always crack me up. They don&#x27;t actually want to follow the science - they just want to take a bunch of pills (easy mode) and look good.<p>If you really wanna live a long time you probably need to be carefully making tons of fermented food the way our grandparents did but with the advances of modern science and monitoring. And of course eat an otherwise healthy diet with moderate and varied amounts of exercise and low stress.<p>And of course win the genetic + luck lottery.<p>Doubt the guy would be having GI issues if he was eating his own homemade Natto everyday
  • arjie21 minutes ago
    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 cancer is not particularly dangerous and lifespan is barely affected by it.<p>Seems interesting but not consequential.
  • nemo13622 minutes ago
    His idea would be cool if not for the lindy effect: each one of his &quot;tests&quot; has a somewhat low probability of extending his life by a few months &#x2F; years.<p>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).
  • rglover40 minutes ago
    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).
  • projektfu8 minutes ago
    This website is a little creepy.
  • chabes13 minutes ago
    Having a blood boy will not save you from inevitable death
  • theplumber40 minutes ago
    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!
  • ChrisArchitect39 minutes ago
    [dupe] Discussion: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=48804049">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=48804049</a>
  • LoganDark38 minutes ago
    I thought the article was talking about his blood donations 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.
    • Melatonic13 minutes ago
      He donates blood or ?
      • rtkwe6 minutes ago
        No he takes blood transfusions from his son along with a lot of other questionable procedures and supplements. No one really knows why he developed this problem and it&#x27;s pretty common but in association with so many exotic medical procedures it&#x27;s spawned a lot of assumptions about the cause.
  • Jemm40 minutes ago
    I completely support people who want to be guinea pigs for health science.
    • copperx32 minutes ago
      What he&#x27;s doing is not science.
      • somenameforme5 minutes ago
        Why would you say that? I&#x27;m not a fan of the guy, because I think he&#x27;s searching for unicorns, but he is 100% engaging in pure science. Hypothesis, experiment, data, falsify, repeat.
      • pixel_popping12 minutes ago
        It literally is, and in many circles (illicit drugs, bodybuilding, cosmestic...) it&#x27;s thanks to those community that we have early-on data. Go look for information about latest psychedelic derivatives, user reviews is the only thing we have accessible, it is Science, a doctor is aware of side-effects because of reporting, user reporting (assuming relatively trusted) is genuinely useful for the world.<p>It&#x27;s also useful because most AI models are able to talk about what the community is saying about drugs and the model can correlate that with many other things and it does enhance diagnostic and it&#x27;s quite useful to train medical models.<p>See a relatively &quot;new&quot; example is about Vapes, there has been deaths and so-on due to people experimenting with illicit ones, without those reports, we will never have in future Science book and AI models that some chemicals are dangerous to inhale or whatever (it&#x27;s a shitty example but you get my point)
        • Clent2 minutes ago
          If creating research data means one is performing science, the word means nothing.
        • rtkwe5 minutes ago
          It&#x27;s not good data for any particular procedure because he&#x27;s doing so many at the same time so you can&#x27;t really use the data to support any particular procedure in a rigorous way.
  • everyone9 minutes ago
    He hired real doctors right? Not like witch doctors or faith healers or something? I wonder was there an issue of them not being able to tell the boss no, no matter how screwy his ideas were?<p>I know Putin is also doing a similar thing, he has a team of doctors who are supposed to keep him alive forever. But he certainly seems the sort of boss you cant disagree with or give bad news to (we can see that in how he commands the war) so maybe he will also hopefully die sooner than we think.
    • elzbardico4 minutes ago
      &gt; I know Putin is also doing a similar thing, he has a team of doctors who are supposed to keep him alive forever.<p>Oh really? have him told you so? Amazing. Did he give you more details about the treatments?
  • hoppp44 minutes ago
    Now this news is everywhere and people seem to be mocking him, but he is a good guy.
    • bglazer28 minutes ago
      He&#x27;s hubristic and selfish. None of his &quot;research&quot; is going to benefit anyone (himself included), making this essentially a huge waste of time and resources. Bryan will die just like all the rest of us, despite being very rich and self-obsessed. He could spend his enormous wealth on supporting real research and proper studies on real diseases that hurt lots of people. Instead he&#x27;s acting like just another huckster promising a fountain of youth. He does this using bombastic terms and taboo methods (e.g. using his son as a blood boy), in a way that&#x27;s calculated to direct enormous public attention towards himself. The science he advocates for is sketchy at best and the results of all his &quot;experiments&quot; will tell us nothing because we can&#x27;t reproduce his methods (his program allegedly costs &gt;$1M per year), nothing is blinded or controlled, and N=1. He&#x27;s a bad person who uses bad methods to glorify himself and now he probably gave himself an autoimmune disease. He deserves to be mocked.
      • Melatonic14 minutes ago
        He&#x27;s actually Bio&quot;hacked&quot; himself though ! Most people just take supplements.<p>Isn&#x27;t getting &quot;hacked&quot; suppose to be a bad thing ?
      • Simon_O_Rourke21 minutes ago
        Well said, he got what was coming to him too.
      • neonstatic15 minutes ago
        &gt; He could spend his enormous wealth on supporting real research and proper studies on real diseases that hurt lots of people<p>There we go again. There&#x27;s always that one guy in the crowd, who knows better what you should be spending your money on. Also, that guy has the moral right to tell you. He is a really good person, you know! So you should listen! You should also thank him.<p>&gt; He deserves to be mocked.<p>Just look how good this guy is.
        • bglazer8 minutes ago
          Yes exactly, there are good and bad things to spend money on. This is a bad way to spend money for the reasons I explained above.
          • neonstatic5 minutes ago
            What he spends his money on is none of your business.
        • wonnage11 minutes ago
          Turns out that when you amass a significant portion of society’s resources then society will be interested in what you do with them.
    • darth_avocado5 minutes ago
      &gt; people seem to be mocking him, but he is a good guy<p>No comment on his character, but he does get mocked because of the performative nature of what he’s trying to sell. You’ll be mocked if you pretend you’re having a hard time breathing, indoors in a hotel in India, with air purifiers on full blast and leave a high profile podcast, but then have no problems hosting your own event when wildfires were ablaze in LA and air quality was terrible.<p>It’s not that the underlying problems he’s trying to solve aren’t there. But the theatrics and performance is what draws the mockery.
    • dpoloncsak34 minutes ago
      Fwiw, people mocked him long before this news broke. People aren&#x27;t hating on him as a result of his diagnosis, just found a new (and admittedly ironic) point to pick at.
    • grumdan17 minutes ago
      &gt; but he is a good guy<p>That definitely doesn&#x27;t seem to be the case, especially if you look beyond his bio-hacking endeavors. His treatment of employees and ex-partners seems pretty horrible: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;2025&#x2F;03&#x2F;21&#x2F;technology&#x2F;bryan-johnson-blueprint-confidentiality-agreements.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;2025&#x2F;03&#x2F;21&#x2F;technology&#x2F;bryan-johnson-...</a>
    • garciasn39 minutes ago
      He’s unfathomably rich and unfathomably stupid; doing insane shit to his body and actively recommending others do the same and that’s why he’s being mocked.<p>“Good guy” or not, he’s paying the price for playing with fire.
      • theplumber32 minutes ago
        At least he walks the walk. I won’t say he is stupid. You see stupid people(a big chunk of the human population) looking for immortality in more stupid things so I would place him way above these folks
      • hoppp29 minutes ago
        There is no proof that his autoimmune disease was caused by him &quot;playing with fire&quot;, it&#x27;s more likely to be genetic.
        • garciasn25 minutes ago
          I didn’t say they were related. I said he’s doing insane shit to himself because he has the money to do so. But it’s that he recommends others do the same and that’s stupid.
    • everyone14 minutes ago
      Being good and wealthy are mutually exclusive.
      • neonstatic10 minutes ago
        I hope you are writing this from a really poor place, like a Brazilian favela. People there must be really good. Why would you not live with them? I am certain you are not some hypocrite, who lives in an affluent, evil place. That would really disappoint me, because I really want to believe you are not full of BS.
        • elzbardico1 minute ago
          Some of worst evilest motherfuckers I knew were dirty poor, and some of them were filthy rich.<p>Evil Motherfuckerness seems to be uniformly distributed across the social strata.
    • Waterluvian25 minutes ago
      I mean, you never know for sure. It&#x27;s all just PR and messaging. Especially from a tech CEO with money. The thing that I struggle to reconcile is how much he&#x27;s been involving his teenage son in this experimentation. That&#x27;s a pretty gigantic red flag for me, I guess.
    • twothreeone40 minutes ago
      [flagged]
      • ksd48230 minutes ago
        That was unkind and unnecessary. Please keep these kinds of comments out of HN.
  • everyone15 minutes ago
    This is absolutely hilarious. lolollol .. aw life is good.
  • therealdkz48 minutes ago
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  • nullsanity35 minutes ago
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  • trilogic35 minutes ago
    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.<p>Is incredible but understandable, many don´t get it.
    • jmcgough27 minutes ago
      He&#x27;s going about this in the least scientific way, though. When n=1 and he has a million confounding variables, it reads more like fear of his own mortality than a meaningful research project. And this is a business for him now, he sells supplements through his Blueprint program.