Sam Altman’s Worldcoin project wants every person on Earth to get their iris scanned, promising a new digital identity layer for the AI era—but after five years, staggering investment, and ethical headaches, it’s still nowhere near its billion-user mark and may never get there.
Five years ago, Tools for Humanity, backed by Sam Altman of OpenAI fame, launched with a radical goal: verify humans worldwide using biometric iris scans, creating what it calls a World ID to prove humanity in an age dominated by ever more convincing artificial intelligence. Now valued at $2.5 billion and supported by major investors like Andreessen Horowitz, Bain Capital, and Khosla Ventures, the company’s Orb scanners have attracted more than $240 million in funding and plenty of global scrutiny, but they’re still below 2% of their one-billion-user target.
The core idea is as bold as it is controversial. The Orb, a reflective, volleyball-sized metal sphere, scans a user’s iris to generate a World ID—a digital passport, slated to become humanity’s anchor in a world of bots and deepfakes. Signups have been incentivized with Worldcoin tokens and access to a World app boasting its own “mini apps,” messaging, and wallet functionality. [Business Insider]
From AI Paranoia to “Proof of Personhood”
Altman’s pitch is tailor-made for a future where machine intelligence confounds online identity. As tools like OpenAI’s GPT-4 and its successors blur the line between human and machine, the Orb aims to offer digital trust—by ensuring every user is uniquely human. [Business Insider]
Yet, despite the visionary premise, the project has been beset by harsh reality: tough regulations, mounting skepticism, and basic questions about its utility. The most optimistic projections have failed to materialize—at last report, just 17.5 million people have undergone iris scans.
Regulatory blowback is fierce. Authorities in Germany flagged insufficient data protection, prompting ongoing appeals. Security agencies in China labeled iris data collection for crypto a potential national security issue. [MIT Technology Review] In three countries, agencies have issued cease-and-desist orders or even raided scanning locations—moves that threaten the project’s ability to operate in the world’s most populous and digitally connected regions.
A Billion Users: Ambition vs. Adoption
Scale is everything for Worldcoin’s vision—and its business. CEO Alex Blania says everything is “optimized” for getting to a billion users rapidly. But the company’s momentum is stalling. Opening scanning stores in London and Los Angeles, running pilots with Tinder in Japan, and partnerships with Stripe, Visa, and Razer have not translated into explosive growth. Even a rumored Reddit partnership has yet to prove transformative. [Semafor]
Industry analysts and former employees alike question what Worldcoin is actually solving—and for whom. Forrester analyst Martha Bennett is blunt: without a compelling reason for users to scan their irises (beyond free cryptocurrency), business viability remains out of reach. [Forrester]
The bulk of Worldcoin’s “traction” has come from markets where crypto giveaways are especially attractive—often in developing countries. But even in these markets, regulatory challenges and local skepticism have led to turmoil, pauses, or outright bans. Rollouts required significant upfront investment: Orbs cost thousands to produce and sometimes faced technical hiccups in the field.
The company generates no traditional revenue from end users. Instead, it’s begun experimenting with fees for its World ID platform and the blockchain-based World Chain, as well as allowing third parties to operate their own Orbs. Still, internal critics and independent analysts agree that the ultimate success depends on continued venture capital backing rather than organic business sustainability.
The Community and the Controversy
On paper, Worldcoin’s community model—recruiting local contractors to sign up new users—helped drive rapid early growth, but created its own challenges. In several countries, local operators and independent organizers capitalized on the promise of free tokens, some even incentivizing people to participate through bused group trips or device handouts.
Regulators and privacy watchdogs have raised the alarm over biometric data collection, transparency, and user consent. In cases such as Argentina, groups of vulnerable individuals were bussed to iris-scanning events with tokens then quickly cashed out, drawing pointed criticism from privacy advocates and industry veterans alike. [DiarioTAG] [Diario Chaco]
In response, Tools for Humanity pushed policy tweaks, like delaying token payouts after scans, and stepped up its regulatory outreach. Still, critics argue the initial “growth at any cost” approach has left lasting credibility issues the company will struggle to overcome.
Why This Matters: The Big Picture for Users and Developers
- For Users: The promise of a secure, privacy-preserving digital identity is tantalizing—but must be weighed against significant questions around data handling, real-world utility, and regional legal protections.
- For Developers: Worldcoin’s World ID is one of several initiatives (including traditional KYC solutions and emerging Web3 identity protocols) vying to underpin the next era of internet authentication. Integration options abound, but adoption may hinge on geopolitical and privacy factors as much as on technology.
- The Reality Check: Success will require more than novel hardware or aggressive marketing. Without widespread legitimacy and a clear, value-added user experience, even massive funding and Altman’s star power may not be enough.
Worldcoin’s ambition—to establish a decentralized, global, human-proof layer for the internet—remains audacious and potentially transformative. But with fierce regulatory resistance, high operational costs, and an unclear path to mass adoption, the Orb is facing its most difficult challenge: proving that proving “humanness” at global scale is even possible, let alone profitable.
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