This sounds like the plot to some dystopian sci-fi movie where some evil computer takes over the world and enslaves everyone, but apparently it's true.

It stars Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT. It involves creating a global currency, cataloging all mankind by scanning their eyes to create unique IDs with some dystopian-named scanner called "the Orb", and gives a free basic income (Starlight will like that part) to make everyone dependent on them.
From my most recent Coinbase newsletter:
All it needs now is to put tattoos of 666 on people's foreheads.
But I am curious to see what happens if everyone can get free Worldcoins as a "basic income" How will this coin be worth anything if anyone can get them for free?
other articles about it:
https://www.theblock.co/post/229742/...coin-app-token
https://www.reuters.com/technology/o...ct-2023-05-25/
https://www.cryptovantage.com/news/w...-basic-income/

It stars Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT. It involves creating a global currency, cataloging all mankind by scanning their eyes to create unique IDs with some dystopian-named scanner called "the Orb", and gives a free basic income (Starlight will like that part) to make everyone dependent on them.
From my most recent Coinbase newsletter:
In 2023, Sam Altman has become the public face of ChatGPT and the latest generation of artificial intelligence in his role as CEO of OpenAI. But before the meteoric rise of the generative AI tool, Altman had also planted the seeds for Worldcoin, a crypto project that aims to provide a universal currency and a new standard for digital identity and privacy, in part by … scanning people’s eyes to confirm their identities.
Let’s take a closer look at how Altman’s initiative — which just raised $115 million last week amid a bear market for VC funding of crypto projects — works, as well as some of the questions raised about Worldcoin's efforts.
What is Worldcoin?
Founded in 2019 by Tools for Humanity, Worldcoin is a crypto-focused project with a three-part goal of creating universal online IDs (World ID), a global cryptocurrency (WLD), and a self-custodial wallet app (World App) that enables payments using WLD, stablecoins, and traditional fiat currencies. It was co-founded by Altman and Alex Blania, who serves as Tools for Humanity’s CEO.
Worldcoin’s lofty mission entails freely distributing WLD as a form of universal basic income to everyone “just for being a unique individual,” and to establish unique digital identities to prove “humanness in an online world populated with increasingly advanced artificial intelligence.”
The company, which is still in beta, says it has so far onboarded nearly two million users across five continents, however, U.S. residents are not currently able to receive the Worldcoin token. Its World App launched in more than 80 countries in early May.
How does Worldcoin work, and will it really scan people’s eyes?
It’s possible to use Worldcoin without scanning your eyes, but in order to claim a free share of Worldcoin tokens, an individual has to verify their identity with a five-pound, chrome imaging device called The Orb, which scans users’ irises in order to create a numerical code that confirms “unique personhood.”
Worldcoin explains their privacy measures (encryption, image deletion) in detail, and says that it “does not use your iris to identify who you are, only to verify that you’re unique.”
How will Worldcoin use its new $115 million funding round?
The latest capital raise will fund product expansion and also go toward bot detection, as well as an alternative to the universally despised, click-on-the-traffic-lights CAPTCHA test — both efforts to better differentiate between humans and AI on the internet. The series C was led by Blockchain Capital, and included firms such as a16z and Bain Capital Crypto. (Coinbase Ventures participated in a previous funding round in 2021.)
What has been the response to the project?
When Worldcoin was announced in 2021, the project received some criticism from privacy advocates such as NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, who voiced alarm about how the project planned to handle its biometric information. (Altman acknowledged in response that he had “definitely underestimated the visceral reaction to using biometrics for identity verification.”) And in April of 2022, the MIT Technology Review detailed what it claimed were serious shortcomings in Worldcoin’s privacy and marketing practices. (Worldcoin addresses some common questions about its approach to data privacy and security on its website.)
Last week, Spencer Bogart, a general partner at Blockchain Capital, called some of the critiques of Worldcoin “wildly off the mark” in a blog post about the project. “What at first appeared to be a dystopian attempt to create a global currency … was actually something else altogether: an entirely privacy preserving solution to an increasingly pervasive problem” of distinguishing between humans and machines on the internet, Bogart said.
Let’s take a closer look at how Altman’s initiative — which just raised $115 million last week amid a bear market for VC funding of crypto projects — works, as well as some of the questions raised about Worldcoin's efforts.
What is Worldcoin?
Founded in 2019 by Tools for Humanity, Worldcoin is a crypto-focused project with a three-part goal of creating universal online IDs (World ID), a global cryptocurrency (WLD), and a self-custodial wallet app (World App) that enables payments using WLD, stablecoins, and traditional fiat currencies. It was co-founded by Altman and Alex Blania, who serves as Tools for Humanity’s CEO.
Worldcoin’s lofty mission entails freely distributing WLD as a form of universal basic income to everyone “just for being a unique individual,” and to establish unique digital identities to prove “humanness in an online world populated with increasingly advanced artificial intelligence.”
The company, which is still in beta, says it has so far onboarded nearly two million users across five continents, however, U.S. residents are not currently able to receive the Worldcoin token. Its World App launched in more than 80 countries in early May.
How does Worldcoin work, and will it really scan people’s eyes?
It’s possible to use Worldcoin without scanning your eyes, but in order to claim a free share of Worldcoin tokens, an individual has to verify their identity with a five-pound, chrome imaging device called The Orb, which scans users’ irises in order to create a numerical code that confirms “unique personhood.”
Worldcoin explains their privacy measures (encryption, image deletion) in detail, and says that it “does not use your iris to identify who you are, only to verify that you’re unique.”
How will Worldcoin use its new $115 million funding round?
The latest capital raise will fund product expansion and also go toward bot detection, as well as an alternative to the universally despised, click-on-the-traffic-lights CAPTCHA test — both efforts to better differentiate between humans and AI on the internet. The series C was led by Blockchain Capital, and included firms such as a16z and Bain Capital Crypto. (Coinbase Ventures participated in a previous funding round in 2021.)
What has been the response to the project?
When Worldcoin was announced in 2021, the project received some criticism from privacy advocates such as NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, who voiced alarm about how the project planned to handle its biometric information. (Altman acknowledged in response that he had “definitely underestimated the visceral reaction to using biometrics for identity verification.”) And in April of 2022, the MIT Technology Review detailed what it claimed were serious shortcomings in Worldcoin’s privacy and marketing practices. (Worldcoin addresses some common questions about its approach to data privacy and security on its website.)
Last week, Spencer Bogart, a general partner at Blockchain Capital, called some of the critiques of Worldcoin “wildly off the mark” in a blog post about the project. “What at first appeared to be a dystopian attempt to create a global currency … was actually something else altogether: an entirely privacy preserving solution to an increasingly pervasive problem” of distinguishing between humans and machines on the internet, Bogart said.
All it needs now is to put tattoos of 666 on people's foreheads.
But I am curious to see what happens if everyone can get free Worldcoins as a "basic income" How will this coin be worth anything if anyone can get them for free?
other articles about it:
https://www.theblock.co/post/229742/...coin-app-token
https://www.reuters.com/technology/o...ct-2023-05-25/
https://www.cryptovantage.com/news/w...-basic-income/
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