Worldcoin’s Iris-Scan ID Proposition Is Best Considered With Eyes Wide Open

Worldcoin

Worldcoin’s campaign to literally capture eyeballs on the internet is coming up against security concerns as critics question whether the benefits of the iris-scanning system of identity verification are worth the privacy risk.

The project offers people about $60 worth of the new Worldcoin (WLD) cryptocurrency in exchange for a digital scan of their eyeballs. In addition to the 25 tokens, users get a unique World ID, which proves they are humans–rather than artificial intelligence software–and can be used to verify their identity to third parties without any other personal information being shared.

But having a private organization like Worldcoin possess a global database of human iris scans is a key concern raised by analysts, investors and researchers who spoke to Forbes–especially since the campaign kicked off in poor communities in the developing world, isn’t yet available in the United States and faces regulatory reviews in Kenya, the U.K. and Germany.

On the other hand, along with being able to prove users are real people, Worldcoin could help enable instant cross-border financial transactions, pave the way for a more transparent and inclusive democratic process through verified voting and create a more efficient distribution of public resources on a global scale, according to Worldcoin.

More than two million people from 34 countries have signed up for World ID, according to data provided by Worldcoin, which also said that it has started ramping up the global distribution of Orbs with the hopes of increasing the scanning devices to 1,500 this year to boost adoption.

Worldcoin claimed that it hit the milestone in less than half the time it took to reach the first million, predominantly in developing countries like Argentina, Chile, India, Uganda, and Kenya where Worldcoin’s iris scanning has just been suspended.

Over the past week, the project’s World App mobile application has become the most-downloaded app in Kenya, according to data from AppFigures without stating the period, displacing popular apps such as WhatsApp Messenger and TikTok. One of the key drivers of adoption in Kenya has been promotions from local influencers and musicians, including Afro-pop star Kagwe Mungai.

“Come with me to sign up for Worldcoin,” reads a text on an Instagram video featuring Mungai standing next to a giant Orb device in Kenya’s capital Nairobi. “I signed up and even got my iris scanned for my unique world ID which I can use to access online services and more.”

The $60 being offered to Kenyans represents nearly half of the average monthly income in East Africa’s largest economy where about a third of the population lives in poverty and has witnessed multiple deadly protests this year over cost-of-living crisis.

How frequently people use the new coin for its intended purposes remains to be seen in the East African country where Tools for Humanity is originally authorized as a data processor.

Kenyan authorities announced on Wednesday that they’ll probe Worldcoin’s operations to assess the project’s “authenticity” and “legality” in the East African country. “Accordingly, the government has SUSPENDED forthwith, activities of ‘WORLD COIN’,” the announcement read. But in a statement to Forbes, the Worldcoin Foundation said that the demand for World ID in Kenya had been “overwhelming” and the suspension was “out of an abundance of caution and in an effort to mitigate crowd volume”.

The country joined both the U.K. and Germany whose data regulators have reportedly launched an inquiry into the digital ID project.

“We note the launch of WorldCoin in the U.K. and will be making enquiries,” a spokesperson for the Information Commissioner’s Office in the U.K. said in an emailed statement. Consent to process biometric data “needs to be freely given and capable of being withdrawn without detriment.” Since information on Worldcoin is blockchain based, it can never be changed or withdrawn.


Worldcoin was cofounded in 2019 by Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, whose ChatGPT program is one of the earliest examples of an artificial intelligence program that can be confused with real people to some degree. Altman’s cofounder Alex Blania claimed that Worldcoin was decentralized, but ironically, the project itself functions as a centralized bottleneck in this system and plans to open-source the code are delayed for the future.

Worldcoin says the operation of infrastructure software such as the backend services that ensure iris codes are unique after signup is coordinated by the Worldcoin Foundation, a group of the project’s contributors based in the Cayman Islands and with a subsidiary in the British Virgin Islands – two locations known globally as tax havens.

“We don’t think it’s a great idea to train a bunch of people to hand over their biometric data to a non-governmental entity,” says a venture capitalist who passed on backing Worldcoin. It also creates a precedent and incentive for other crypto companies to collect biometric data, which could have dangerous consequences if a project’s leaders turn out to be corrupt, the investor says.