Technology

Authors: TheIndianSubcontinent News AgencyImage caption Controversial bodyhacker Aaron Traywich has been found dead A biohacker who became infamous after apparently injecting himself with an untested herpes drug in front of an audience has been found dead.
Aaron Traywick's body had been discovered in a spa room in Washington DC on Sunday, local police said.Vice News reported that Traywick had been using a flotation therapy tank.
The 28-year-old was chief executive of Ascendance Biomedical.
He had skirted the law by self-medicating as well as encouraging others to do likewise.A police spokeswoman has said no evidence has been found to suggest foul play.Traywick had claimed his biohacking company had developed a DIY "research compound" that could cure HIV, Aids and herpes, but had no independent proof to back this up.Biohacking refers to people's efforts to alter their own biology by a variety of means including lifestyle and diet changes, surgery and the use of unlicensed therapies.The BBC challenged Traywick over his behaviour when it interviewed him at the BodyHacking Con in Austin, Texas, in February.Traywick, who had herpes, had performed a stunt at the event, apparently injecting his company's unregulated product into his leg.On stage, he had referred to the product as a "research compound".
But in conversation with the BBC he described it as a "treatment" - a claim that had the potential to attract the attention of the US Food and Drug Administration.Media captionWATCH: The BBC's Dave Lee met with Aaron Traywick during the BodyHacking ConTraywick told the BBC he had plans to take his work to Venezuela.When questioned whether it was ethical to encourage sick people to effectively act as guinea pigs, Traywick responded: "The best we can do is we can say to these people, 'We know you don't have access to this medication.'"They don't have any other options."All we know is that if it works they don't die."Traywick's work had caused concern among other members of the body-hacking community.
"The idea that any scientist, biohacker or not, has created a cure for a disease with no testing and no data is more ridiculous than believing jet fuel melts steel beams," wrote Josiah Zayner, a scientist who sells do-it-yourself gene-engineering kits.An autopsy was scheduled to be carried out on Traywick's body, but the results have yet to be disclosed.





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