Not to mention that every reference to QD in medical applications is speculative research papers. Plus as was mentioned elsewhere the minor problem of toxic cadmium, a known cancer agent that can cause cancer in humans, a major element in QD.
But they work in tv monitors and don't hurt the panels.
As a result of the very superficial view you have offered - and thanks for that one as it led to what's below, all new to me - that guy doesn't look legit. If he says he did a paper on them 15 years ago while at the same time saying they are zero-dimensional when in fact they are not, that's a problem for him
"Sorry to post this here, but I needed to correct this comment. It's a little un-scientific."
VERA FILES FACT CHECK: Microchips, quantum dots and other coronavirus conspiracy theories
AUTHOR VERA Files DATE February 18, 2021
Apart from the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) itself, there is a battle being waged against vaccine hesitancy and vaccine-related misinformation.
This month, one post detected by VERA Files Fact Check circulating on Facebook (FB) aimed to further a conspiracy theory about a “plan demic” involving microchips implanted into individuals who get vaccinated against COVID-19 for tracking purposes. This is false and has been debunked by health experts and fact-checkers alike. (See: VERA FILES FACT CHECK: Conspiracy theories on COVID-19 vaccines having microchips revived)
The post claimed that the vaccine will come in the form of “quantum dots” and that the public will be part of an identification system called “ID2020.” This conspiracy holds no ground.
Falsely tagged as one of the “globalists” behind the “plan demic” is Microsoft founder and philanthropist Bill Gates.
A day after the AMA online forum, website biohackinfo.com published an article claiming Gates “will use microchip implants to fight coronavirus,” even if he did not mention anything about microchipping in the Reddit event.
What was referenced in biohackinfo’s piece are the “digital certificates” Gates mentioned, which the article said are in the form of “quantum-dot tattoos” — a term also carried by the spurious posts making rounds on FB.
It is not the same as the “quantum-dot tattoos” the conspiracy theorists are referring to.
The use of quantum dots under an unrelated technology was developed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), with funding from the Gates Foundation, prior to the pandemic.
A December 2019 MIT press release .. https://news.mit.edu/2019/storing-vaccine-history-skin-1218 .. stated that the said technology aims to do an “on-patient storage of vaccination history” using an invisible “quantum dot dye” that will be administered alongside vaccines through a microneedle patch and will be situated just below the skin’s surface.
A “specially adapted smartphone” would be able to detect the dye and access an individual’s vaccination records stored in it for at least five years.
He also said in the MIT press release that the technology was designed for places where peoples’ medical records are not easily accessible, if not completely unavailable. “(It) could enable the rapid and anonymous detection of patient vaccination history to ensure that every child is vaccinated,” he added.
That ID2020 is related to quantum dot technology and the COVID-19 pandemic is unsubstantiated.
“To beat COVID-19, we also need to defeat the parallel pandemic of mistrust that has consistently hindered our collective response to this disease, and that could undermine our shared ability to vaccinate against it,” said International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies president Francesco Rocca in November ahead of a United Nations High-Level Special Session on the COVID-19 pandemic.
(Editor's Note: VERA Files has partnered with Facebook to fight the spread of disinformation. Find out more about this partnership and our methodology.)