I'm Jewish, returned to that after leaving the JW religion. So here is some more that will probably shock you.
The Book of Daniel is not located among the other prophetic books in the Hebrew Bible. It is found among the writings, like the books of Ruth, Samuel, and Kings.
Daniel is not one of the Jewish prophets. We have an official list of men and women who were prophets to our people, and Daniel was not one of them.
There are many legends about Daniel, and the book with his name just happens to be the most famous of them all. There was likely a historical Daniel, but he likely lived many years before the deportation to Babylon. Daniel is known for being a Jew who, due to circumstances unknown, ended up living among the Gentiles, proving faithful to the Law despite being separated from his people. But if there was such a real man, he died long before the stories in Daniel take place.
Daniel is a legendary figure used by Jews to teach moral lessons. Unlike what JWs teach, the character of "Daniel" is merely a Jewish ideal, like Uncle Sam is for the USA. The Biblical book has two parts, the first where Daniel is used to teach Jews living during the Hasmonean period to "be more like Daniel" who resisted giving up his culture despite living within another. The second-half is an apocalypse, a story of hope written as if Jews have a prophecy from "Daniel" promising that the foreign powers that had invaded Israel at the time and dedicated the Temple to a heathen deity would be vanquished.
Catholics and mainstream Protestants also agree. Yep, this ain't news to the rest of the world either. Since the 1950s, and even earlier in some quarters (a little later in others) Christianity in general adopted this view through critical analysis. Today it is the common view of almost all Christians as well as Jews.
While Christians still find a few texts in Daniel being prophetic of Jesus, they are minor ones. Even the 70 weeks prophecy is no longer used in mainstream Christianity as a prophecy about Jesus.
Two NRSV major study or annotated editions will give more information, as will the NABRE official US Catholic Bible or the NJB with study notes used mostly in the UK. The new CEB study edition has great information on it, as do all Jewish commentaries and study books.