On July 24, 2023, Worldcoin officially launched its WLD token, bringing one of the most ambitious — and controversial — crypto projects in recent memory to the mainstream. Founded by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Max Novendstern, Worldcoin promises to create a global identity verification system powered by iris-scanning hardware called the Orb. Four days after launch, the crypto world was still processing the implications.
TL;DR
- Worldcoin (WLD) token launched on July 24, 2023, via airdrop to verified users
- Project founded by OpenAI’s Sam Altman and Max Novendstern; CEO is Alex Blania
- WLD is an ERC-20 token on Ethereum, distributed via Optimism layer-2
- Total supply capped at 10 billion tokens; ~70% allocated to users, remainder to insiders
- Only ~150 Orbs operational at launch with 2 million signups; goal is 1,500 Orbs by year-end
- WLD listed on exchanges at approximately $2.10–$2.20
The Vision Behind Worldcoin
Worldcoin’s core premise is straightforward yet audacious: in a world increasingly dominated by artificial intelligence, proving that someone is a real human being will become critically important. The project’s solution involves scanning people’s irises using a spherical device called the Orb, which generates a unique World ID that serves as proof of personhood.
Users who complete the verification process receive WLD tokens as a reward — essentially a form of universal basic income distributed through cryptocurrency. The project migrated to the Optimism mainnet, a layer-2 blockchain built on Ethereum, for its token distribution. The total supply of WLD is capped at 10 billion tokens for the first 15 years.
As of the July 24 launch, approximately 2 million people had signed up for the platform — a fraction of the hundreds of millions or billions that Worldcoin needs to create meaningful network effects. CEO Alex Blania told Fortune that the company hoped to have 1,500 Orbs operational by the end of 2023, with the token launch expected to drive significantly more interest in signups.
The AI Connection
Worldcoin’s launch timing was no accident. Since the November 2022 launch of ChatGPT and the explosion of generative AI into public consciousness, the project had pivoted its messaging to emphasize the proof of personhood angle. Tools for Humanity, Worldcoin’s parent organization, developed a software development kit allowing other applications to use World ID as a login credential — replacing traditional email and password combinations.
Blania and his engineering team argued that Worldcoin’s iris-scan protocol was the only universal method for creating a truly global identity verification system. The token serves as the incentive mechanism to drive adoption, rewarding users for submitting their biometric data to the network.
Regulatory and Privacy Challenges
Despite the hype, Worldcoin faced significant headwinds. Users in the United States were not eligible to receive tokens amid ongoing regulatory uncertainty — a notable exclusion for a project co-founded by one of Silicon Valley’s most prominent figures. Privacy advocates raised alarms about the collection and storage of biometric data, even as Worldcoin insisted its cryptographic protocols safeguarded user information.
Reports of a black market for Worldcoin credentials emerged in China, where individuals were selling their verified accounts to others seeking to claim airdropped tokens. Blania dismissed this as a manageable problem, telling Fortune that every identity system has frauds and that the team was developing mechanisms for users to recover and reauthenticate their credentials.
Multiple countries launched investigations into Worldcoin’s data collection practices in the weeks following the token launch, with regulators in Europe and Africa expressing particular concern about the mass harvesting of iris data from populations that may not fully understand what they were consenting to.
Why This Matters
Worldcoin’s launch represents a fascinating collision of AI, cryptocurrency, identity verification, and privacy concerns. Whether the project succeeds or fails, it has forced a global conversation about how societies will verify human identity in an age of increasingly capable artificial intelligence. The crypto component — distributing tokens as incentives for biometric verification — adds a financial dimension that could accelerate adoption but also raises questions about exploitation and consent. With Bitcoin trading around $29,319 and Ethereum near $1,874 at the time of launch, the broader crypto market provided a relatively stable backdrop for WLD’s debut on exchanges at roughly $2.10. The question now is whether Worldcoin can scale from 2 million users to its ambitious target of billions — and whether the world is ready to trade iris scans for crypto tokens.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always conduct your own research before making investment decisions.
scanning your iris for a token worth $2.20 is the most dystopian thing in crypto and thats saying a lot given the competition
70% of supply to users sounds generous until you realize they need your biometric data. hard pass from me
you literally trade your iris scan for a token worth $2.20. the cost of your biometric data is less than a coffee and its permanent
Only 150 Orbs for 2 million signups. The bottleneck is real. Will believe the 1,500 Orb goal when I see it.
150 orbs for 2M signups means each orb processes 13k verifications. at that rate reaching 1B users would take decades even with 1,500 orbs
13k verifications per orb is actually impressive throughput. the bottleneck is hardware distribution not processing capacity. mass manufacturing those optics is the real challenge
the real play is world ID not WLD. proof of personhood will be valuable long after the token price stops mattering
proof of personhood matters more than the token price but the token incentive is what gets people to actually scan. the system needs both to work