• AI deepfakes are on the rise, and they’re starting to shake up everything, from politics and finance to the basic trust we rely on online every day.
  • In response, World Network is expanding its Proof of Human technology to help fight back against fake content and growing digital fraud.

Artificial Intelligence (AI) as a scientific discipline began in the 20th century, in the 1950s. In the 21st century, AI is now driving everything from voice assistants, healthcare diagnostics, finance, agriculture, and more. There’s a catch, deepfakes, what was first viewed as experimental has now become a menace.

For context, deepfakes are realistic but fake images, videos, or audio clips generated by artificial intelligence, often using deep learning models like Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs).

World Network, a global identity project backed by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, is designed to tackle one of the biggest emerging challenges in the digital world: distinguishing between humans and increasingly convincing AI-generated entities. At the core of this project is a system called “Proof of Human.” This is a biometric verification system that confirms someone is a real, living human being, not a bot or AI, without requiring invasive personal data. It does this through a device called the Orb.

In a recent podcast, Eddy Lazzarin, the CTO of a16z crypto, Remco Bloemen, the Head of Blockchain at World Foundation, and Adrian Ludwig, who is Chief Architect at Tools for Humanity, discussed the challenges of verifying human identity in an era dominated by AI agents, bots, and deepfakes. They emphasized how the World’s technology is designed with privacy at its core, aiming to verify humans at a global scale without compromising individual anonymity. So far, over 27 million people have joined the World Network.

Initiatives to Enhance Digital Verification

World has teamed up with Rappi, Latin America’s top delivery app, to make proving you’re human as easy as ordering takeout. People in Buenos Aires can now schedule a World ID verification right from the Rappi app, and a trained courier will come directly to their door with an Orb to complete the process. It’s a move designed to make secure, anonymous identity verification more convenient and accessible.

Meanwhile, in Taiwan, residents can now verify their World ID in person at the first-ever World Space in Taipei. The launch couldn’t come at a better time, with 88% of Taiwanese citizens saying they’re concerned about telling humans apart from bots online, this step brings real peace of mind.

Over in South Korea, World has partnered with KAIST, the country’s leading science and tech university, to launch Asia’s first Anonymous Multi-Party Computation (AMPC) node. This tech lets different parties work together on shared data without revealing individual inputs, offering a powerful way to protect privacy while enabling identity on the blockchain.

The world network is not the only one in this. IOTA is creating tools to prevent misinformation brought by AI. As reported by CNF, their new decentralized digital identity system gives content creators, institutions, and even machines cryptographically verified credentials. It’s all about giving users control over their data while ensuring what we see online is authentic.

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