Dr. Daniel

4.3K posts

Dr. Daniel banner
Dr. Daniel

Dr. Daniel

@CyberHealthProf

Chicago, IL 가입일 Haziran 2013
778 팔로잉17.9K 팔로워
Dr. Daniel 리트윗함
Kevin O'Leary aka Mr. Wonderful
We uncovered something far bigger than I ever expected. After seeing coordinated false attacks against the Utah data center project, we brought in an advanced data science team to trace where the content was coming from and the results were shocking. What we found led back to organized networks, political activist groups, and funding trails tied to massive international entities. We dug through IRS 990 filings, tracked IP data from around the world, and uncovered what appears to be a coordinated campaign targeting energy and data center projects across multiple regions. I shared 90 pages of evidence with federal law enforcement and raised concerns directly with contacts at the White House. This isn’t speculation. The filings, funding records, dates, and connections are documented. There’s a coordinated PR war happening around energy infrastructure and data centers, and we’re not going to ignore it.
English
4.7K
10K
43K
2.2M
Dr. Daniel
Dr. Daniel@CyberHealthProf·
@kalos21million I did a podcast recently and touched on it. The key is your nutritional habits. You must have a good healthy foundation that fits you specifically. Start food tracking now and after. It would be beneficial to also run labs now and down the road.
English
1
0
1
394
kalos
kalos@kalospepgod·
I’m curious to know if you or anyone you know was able to come OFF a GLP1 completely and keep the weight off Some new statistics are looking like theres a good chance you won’t gain it back after stopping
English
26
2
62
18.2K
BrynTalkington
BrynTalkington@BrynTalkington·
@ScienceFocusonX Vizz is GREAT in a heavy reading day, but the downside is everything is “dimmed.” You want to brighten your surroundings like you brighten your phone, but can’t. Love the clarity, don’t love the dimness of surroundings.
English
3
0
35
4.4K
ScienceFocus
ScienceFocus@ScienceFocusonX·
Reading glasses might be done. The FDA just approved a once-daily eye drop called VIZZ that sharpens near vision in about 30 minutes and keeps it sharp for up to 10 hours. One drop. Each eye. Per day. That's it. The active ingredient is aceclidine, a compound first used back in 1975 to treat glaucoma. Scientists figured out it could be repurposed to gently shrink the pupil, creating a "pinhole effect" that pulls close-up text back into focus, the same trick your eye does when you squint. Unlike Vuity, the 2021 drop that came before it, VIZZ doesn't mess with your focusing muscles. So no blurry distance vision. No brow ache. No weird zoom effect. It was tested across more than 30,000 treatment days with no major complications. Cost is roughly $2 a day. This matters because presbyopia, the age-related slide that hits most people between 40 and 45, already affects more than 120 million Americans. By 2030, the World Health Organization expects around 2 billion people worldwide to have it. LENZ Therapeutics, the maker, started rolling out samples in October. The squint era is ending. Source: Ynetnews, FOX 26 Houston, Yahoo News
ScienceFocus tweet media
English
359
1.6K
7.2K
1.1M
Dr. Daniel 리트윗함
Enhanced Games
Enhanced Games@enhanced_games·
A $1,000,000 WORLD RECORD SWIM! Kristian Gkolomeev wins the Men’s 50m Freestyle in 20.81s and takes home $1,000,000 bonus + $250,000 first place prize and reclaims his 50M Freestyle world record.
English
224
618
14.2K
4.4M
Dr. Daniel
Dr. Daniel@CyberHealthProf·
@bryanrbeal This is very common practice nowadays. Patients either see a nurse practitioner (np) or a physicians assistant (pa). Even np are being replaced by pa's.
English
1
0
0
258
Bryan Beal 🎧
Bryan Beal 🎧@bryanrbeal·
If I have to see an NP instead of a real doctor, I want a 50% discount on my bill This is quite the racket healthcare providers have devised. Most of the time you go to the “doctor“ you’ll never see a doctor at all. You’ll see a nurse practitioner. But they’ll still bill you as if you had seen a doctor. Even though the nurse practitioners are far less educated and trained, and paid much less.
The Wall Street Journal@WSJ

Employers are clamoring for workers who can do doctor-like work but who are trained faster and can cost them less. on.wsj.com/4wMBXbr

English
414
706
9.2K
1.3M
BowTiedMeatHead 🥩💪
BowTiedMeatHead 🥩💪@bowtiedmeathead·
Do you feel noticeably worse than you did 10 years ago? Less energy Less motivation Slower recovery I went through the same thing. Finally got my bloodwork looked at. Everything changed after that. Book a free consult with our licensed clinician today.
English
24
11
574
1.4M
Dr. Daniel
Dr. Daniel@CyberHealthProf·
H-1B and O-1 visa holders are temporary non-immigrant workers, not immigrants. They have time-limited permission to live and work in the US but must maintain temporary intent and generally leave when the visa expires (unless they transition to permanent status). Immigrants (lawful permanent residents) hold immigrant visas or green cards. They have indefinite permission to live and work in the US, can stay permanently, and can eventually apply for citizenship.
English
1
0
6
601
Nick Davidov
Nick Davidov@Nick_Davidov·
Over 50% of US unicorns are founded by immigrants. If you look at top research papers coming out of top US labs and universities OVER 50% names there are immigrants. Our country enjoys unprecedented wealth by extracting top minds from the rest of the world. We should not be shooting ourselves in the foot there
English
310
71
1.6K
189.3K
Nick Davidov
Nick Davidov@Nick_Davidov·
The biggest bullshit move by DHS in its history. So everyone on a O1 or H1B visa would have to stop working legally in the US, go back to their country and wait for years of backlog? This includes top scientists in our universities, founders of billion dollar companies (at least 3 just in our portfolio would be affected by the way). And if we look at individual countries it becomes even more bs. Indians would have to wait decades. Russians don’t have anywhere to go (there is no US embassy in Russia, hello?). This is the worst imaginable way to disrupt important work for the country and pretend you’re fighting some loophole.
Homeland Security@DHSgov

An alien who is in the U.S. temporarily and wants a Green Card must return to their home country to apply. This policy allows our immigration system to function as the law intended instead of incentivizing loopholes. The era of abusing our nation’s immigration system is over.

English
4.5K
3K
19.9K
8.3M
Dr. Daniel
Dr. Daniel@CyberHealthProf·
Many COA's aren't legit or dont show contamination of heavy metals, etc. Plus, people still need to know the legal risk, not including long-term risk since there is no way to know what truly is in it. I havent found a place that shows fully tested results. A lot of them are coming out of China/India.
English
0
0
0
5
Jesse Morse, M.D.
Jesse Morse, M.D.@DrJesseMorse·
My thoughts on Retatrutide as a prescriber and a patient.
English
36
37
667
147K
Dr. Daniel
Dr. Daniel@CyberHealthProf·
@EricThriller @DrJesseMorse Retatrutide is still in Phase 3 clinical trials and not FDA-approved. It cannot legally be prescribed by doctors, dispensed by pharmacies, or sold commercially. The only legal way to get the real drug is by enrolling in one of Eli Lilly’s official clinical trials.
English
1
0
0
122
EricThriller
EricThriller@EricThriller·
@DrJesseMorse I really want to start Retatrutide but how do I even bring it up to my doctor? I’ve asked them in the past and they don’t even know what I’m talking about…
English
5
0
3
2.2K
Dr. Daniel
Dr. Daniel@CyberHealthProf·
@DoctorTro At my practice, I have noticed a trend. Vegan and vegetarians had higher scores than those that focused on a meat based diet.
English
0
0
2
1.3K
DoctorTro
DoctorTro@DoctorTro·
🚨I have bad news everyone 🚨 After 9 years eating ketogenic, no processed carbs, no sugar, very little fruit but plenty of steak and eggs, I regret to inform you about my most recent heart scan and the ultrasounds of my arteries. My most recent calcium scan was zero, and my carotids and femoral arteries are completely free of any plaque 😮 Why is this bad? Somewhere, on some corner of the earth there is a vegan who will be suffering to see me thrive eating animals.
DoctorTro tweet media
English
271
981
8.9K
1.3M
Dr. Daniel
Dr. Daniel@CyberHealthProf·
Once I started drinking only RO water and then a pinch of baja gold salt under my tongue, I went 49 to 47. Then, I usually just keep running extra labs, instead of donating, and that keeps me around 45-46. I run some people labs and they have a perfect hematocrit number. Im not that lucky either.
English
0
0
1
27
Shreddington
Shreddington@TheShreddington·
No matter how much the “science has changed” I’m opting for elective phlebotomy tomorrow to reduce my hematocrit which currently stands at 50.1. While my RBC and platelets are well within normal range, I cannot get the warning from my first endocrinologist out of my head. “You must never let your hematocrit go above 50.” This was said to me over twenty years ago and proves that I too am subject to often believing the first thing I hear.
English
17
0
29
7.9K
Dr. Daniel
Dr. Daniel@CyberHealthProf·
@Budgetdog_ This is why in integrative health, we say, lab test, dont guess.
English
0
0
1
247
Brennan Schlagbaum, CPA
Brennan Schlagbaum, CPA@Budgetdog_·
Haven’t had a protein shake in years. Most protein supplements are garbage. Mostly can get all protein from natural foods anyway. Just have to plan better. Won’t go as far as saying the supplement industry is a scam, but most things are usually not needed.
English
33
4
62
14.4K
Dr. Daniel 리트윗함
Black Hat
Black Hat@BlackHatEvents·
Modern adversaries don’t slow down—and neither can defenders. Black Hat USA 2026 delivers the latest research, tools, and tactics straight from the world’s leading security experts. Get ahead of what’s next. Register by May 22nd to lock in the best pricing.
English
13
16
141
1.3M
Dr. Daniel
Dr. Daniel@CyberHealthProf·
@ChefGruel Same. Its too much. Not appetizing at all.
English
0
1
1
124
IT Guy
IT Guy@T3chFalcon·
Idk man, I'll say Kevin Mitnick. At 12, he used social engineering to get into the LA bus system's punch card system, all for free rides. In his 20s, he broke into Nokia, Motorola, etc. Using just a phone and his voice. He also gained access to ARPANET, the military-funded precursor to the modern internet, through a university computer. This gave him access to some Department of Defense (DoD) and Pentagon-connected systems. The FBI chased him for years. He stayed off the grid, moving from city to city and hacking while on the run. When they finally caught him in 1995, his skills worried them so much that a judge banned him from using a phone in prison. A PHONE. He later became one of the world's most respected cybersecurity consultants. He also has one of the coolest business cards that has also serves as a lockpicking set.
IT Guy tweet mediaIT Guy tweet media
Abdulkadir | Cybersec@cyber__razz

Who can tell me the story of the first hacker the world heard about?

English
23
117
1.4K
87.5K