Tinder aims to verify your humanity by having you look into an orb. Yes, you read that correctly.
Gazing into an orb to verify your humanity is no longer just a concept from science fiction.
Online dating is already fraught with trust issues, and Tinder now intends to introduce an eyeball scan into the equation. The well-known dating platform has revealed a global collaboration with World, a biometric identity firm established by OpenAI’s Sam Altman. To confirm your identity on Tinder, users will soon have the option to undergo an eye scan using a physical orb device.
What is World ID and how does Tinder’s human verification function?
World
World is a company centered on the notion that verifying one’s humanity online will become increasingly crucial as AI bots proliferate and outnumber actual people on the internet. Their answer is a unique scanning device called the Orb, which checks your irises at its physical locations to ensure that you are a genuine person.
Once confirmed, you will obtain a World ID associated with that scan. Earlier this year, World conducted a pilot of this verification method with Tinder in Japan, and the results were reportedly positive enough to justify a global launch.
World
On Tinder, users who complete the World ID verification will receive a badge on their profile indicating their verified human status. To further encourage participation, Tinder is providing five free Boosts to anyone who finishes the verification process. The company hopes this incentive will be significant enough for users to share their biometric information.
Is this just for dating apps, or will the World orb expand its reach?
World
Tinder is merely the beginning. Zoom is now incorporating World ID, allowing meeting hosts to confirm participants' identities before they join calls. DocuSign is also integrating this technology, enabling users to require World verification for contracts. Additionally, Reddit may utilize World ID as a tool for detecting bots.
Moreover, World has introduced Concert Kit, a feature that allows artists to reserve concert tickets exclusively for verified humans, aiming directly at scalper bots. Concert Kit will soon be piloted at a Bruno Mars World Tour concert in San Francisco.
Despite World’s strong push for widespread use, governments in Brazil and several other nations have prohibited it due to privacy concerns. The debate over whether sharing your biometric data with a third party will become the norm is only set to intensify.
Manisha enjoys covering technology that affects daily life, encompassing everything from smartphones and apps to gaming and streaming…
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Tinder aims to verify your humanity by having you look into an orb. Yes, you read that correctly.
Tinder now offers a way for you to verify that you're human by scanning your irises using a physical orb device created by Sam Altman's World.
