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Worldcoin has been courting users with a plan as ambitious as it is controversial and was recently launched on July 24, 2023. Built on the promise of an equitably distributed, collectively owned digital currency, the company aims to amass a billion users by leveraging an unusual sign-up mechanism: iris scans.
Unearthed by ZachXBT on Twitter and citing an MIT Technology Review from 2022, they stated that the most unsettling part is âhow the WorldCoin team has boasted about how many users they have. When in reality they have been exploiting people in developing countries.â
2/6 Most alarming to me is how the WorldCoin team has boasted about how many users they have.
When in reality they have been exploiting people in developing countries.https://t.co/8pc84CQyVc pic.twitter.com/b9smMB4yqa
â ZachXBT (@zachxbt) July 24, 2023
In 2022, MIT investigated how Worldcoin was able to amass as many iris scans as it could. Reporting that Worldcoin promised that âbiometric information remains on the orb and is deleted once uploadedâor at least it will be one dayâ and $15 of Worldcoin, the research questioned just why Worldcoin targeted the Global South instead of crypto enthusiasts â those who have been even scanning their irises for content.
âIn villages across West Java, Indonesia [âŠ] Worldcoin representatives were showing up for a day or two and collecting biometric data. In return they were known to offer everything from free cash (often local currency as well as Worldcoin tokens) to Airpods to promises of future wealth.â
Worldcoinâs strategy centers around a proprietary device called the âchrome orb,â designed to scan user irises, preventing fraudulent multiple accounts. This âbiometric uniquenessâ is transformed into an âIrisHash,â a distinct identifier that the company claims is stored locally and never shared.
MIT interviewed a man named Iyus Ruswandi from Indonesia, asking him about his experience with Worldcoin. He stated that âneither the company representatives on site nor the village officials could answer even basic questions about Worldcoin.â Thinking it was a scam, he told researchers that he thought it was âa mass data collection effort disguised as some kind of secret, offline airdrop.â
And, while internet literacy was limited to a pre-installed Facebook application on peopleâs cell phones:
âWorldcoin representatives âfirst had to help many residents in setting up emails [and] logging in to the web,â Ruswandi recalled. If it was about attracting users to a new cryptocurrency, he wondered, âwhy did Worldcoin target lower-income communities in the first place, instead of crypto enthusiasts or communities?ââ
While Worldcoin promises privacy protection, MIT stated that they found that there was a lack of informed consent â but a lot of deceptive marketing and extraneous personal data collecting â when it came to signing up for Worldcoin.
Meanwhile, US-based users are not even allowed to participate in the airdrop due to privacy laws. The majority of the countries where people interviewed originated from â Indonesia, Kenya, Sudan, Ghana, Chile and Norway â do not have as stringent privacy and investor protection laws as countries in Europe or the United States do, for example:
âSimply put, itâs just cheaper and easier to run this kind of data collection operation in places where people have little money and few legal protections.â
Security experts, including Edward Snowden, have expressed concerns in 2022 about Worldcoinâs iris scanning process and the potential misuse of a global iris database.
This looks like it produces a global (hash) database of people’s iris scans (for “fairness”), and waves away the implications by saying “we deleted the scans!”
Yeah, but you save the *hashes* produced by the scans. Hashes that match *future* scans.
Don’t catalogue eyeballs. https://t.co/uAk0NYGeZu
â Edward Snowden (@Snowden) October 23, 2021
âThe human body is not a ticket-punch,â Snowden further tweeted.
Despite professing fairness in currency distribution, the companyâs commitment is under question due to an early allocation of 20% of coins to Worldcoinâs full-time employees and investors (one being a16z), respectively.
Meanwhile, critics point out that this allocation contradicts the very ethos of the companyâs stated intentions:
âCreating one identity across Web3 was anathema to a movement that had turned to blockchain, decentralized finance, and DAOs for the express purpose of not being known.â
Worldcoinâs user recruitment strategy, involving independent contractors or âorb operators,â and the companyâs shaky technical infrastructure have also come under fire. Instances of users seemingly losing access to their accounts and the uncertain value of Worldcoin tokens pre-launch add to growing concerns about the ventureâs transparency and viability, MIT reported.
Even as the company dismisses these findings as âisolated incidents,â the question remains: Are Worldcoinâs revolutionary aspirations for financial inclusion capable of withstanding the critical security and privacy concerns surfacing in the wake of its bold endeavor?
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