I just put in a made up email address and it let me right in without having to even have that address. e.g. ‘abcdefg@abcdefg.com’ would work). This exclusivity thing is an obvious ploy. In the video, a ‘webinar’ recorded and put out on the internet, he says things like “Please keep this confidential - the FDA is shutting down all kinds of ideas that are actually good for your health, and we don’t want them to come after us”.
The video itself is almost an hour long and I can’t take more than about 2 minutes of the presentation, so I just went to the web site of the company that’s selling it, whatever it is… (some kind of water additive).
The product is among a whole variety of miracle, breakthrough inventions this particular vendor has for sale:
etc.
Looks like a scam to me without watching the entire presentation, based on much circumstantial evidence like the presentation style itself, the false ‘confidentiality’ of this information that they purposely recorded and made available on the internet, and the other products of questionable veracity available for sale on their web site.
Step one in getting into any website that asks for only an email to view content is to try lying, though sometimes I’ll just use a throwaway account, just in case it asks me to confirm.