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World Foundation: 'Why Identity Suddenly Became One of Tech’s Biggest Problems'

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As AI-generated voices, faces, and personalities become more convincing, identity itself is starting to fracture online. The internet is entering a period where seeing someone’s face or hearing their voice may no longer mean very much.

That’s the backdrop against which World Foundation is trying to build.

“I do developer relations, among wearing lots of other hats, at World Foundation,” Ian explained during an interview with Blockster’s host Eric Spivak at Consensus 2026 in Miami Beach.

“Essentially, I help communicate how World works, what it does, why we built it to a wide range of people — and help build it a little bit every now and then.”

The conversation opened with a concern that increasingly feels unavoidable across the internet.

“You know, right now in the AI age — or the era of AI — we’re seeing all of this adoption and it’s kind of making people question identity,” Ian said. “Making people a little timid and hesitant to do business.”

Then he got more specific.

“I know I’ve gotten Telegram scams, social engineering, phishing accounts, and people actually imitating me,” he continued. “Using deepfakes, voice coders, and ElevenLabs and a bunch of different tools to emulate who I am and what I do to try to scam and fraud people.”

That anxiety hovered over much of Consensus this year.

Everywhere in Miami, companies were pitching autonomous AI agents capable of handling payments, negotiating contracts, managing workflows, and interacting online with minimal human involvement.

But underneath the excitement sat another question the industry is only beginning to grapple with: how do you prove someone is actually human online?

How World ID Works

For World Foundation, that question sits at the center of the entire project.

“So the orb is our device that is sort of your entry point to the strongest credential in World ID,” Ian explained. “World ID as a protocol exists to let you prove that you are a real, unique human on the internet.”

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The now-famous Orb devices — metallic biometric scanners that have become closely associated with the World ecosystem — are designed to verify uniqueness through iris recognition.

“And the orb is what actually checks to make sure you’re a human,” Ian said. “The system working behind it makes sure that you’re unique, and each human only has one World ID. So you can prove you’re not a bot online.”

The project, originally launched under the Worldcoin name before evolving into the broader World Network ecosystem, has grown rapidly despite controversy surrounding biometric verification and digital identity infrastructure.