• Coins MarketCap
    • Coins MarketCap
    • Crypto Calculator
    • Top Gainers and Loser of the day
  • Crypto Exchanges
  • Bitcoin News
  • Crypto News
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Blockchain
    • Finance
    • Investing
    • View all latest Updates regarding crypto
Monday, October 6, 2025
WIREOPEDIA
No Result
View All Result
Contribute!
CONTACT US
  • Home
  • Breaking News
  • World
  • UK
  • US
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Defense
  • Health Care
  • Politics
  • Strange
  • Crypto News
WIREOPEDIA
  • Home
  • Breaking News
  • World
  • UK
  • US
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Defense
  • Health Care
  • Politics
  • Strange
  • Crypto News
No Result
View All Result
WIREOPEDIA
No Result
View All Result
Home Blockchain

Does digital ID have risks even if it’s ZK-wrapped?

by wireopedia memeber
September 1, 2025
in Blockchain, Crypto, Crypto Market, Cryptocurrency, Finance, Investing, Market
0
Does digital ID have risks even if it’s ZK-wrapped?
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The following is a guest post and opinion from Evin McMullen, Co-founder & CEO at Billions.Network.

You might also like

Production shutdown enters sixth week at Jaguar Land Rover

Here’s Why The Bitcoin Price Crashed After Hitting $125,700 All-Time High

Are South Korean retail traders the only thing keeping Ethereum treasury companies alive?

ZK Won’t Save Us: Why Digital Identity Must Stay Plural

Zero-knowledge (ZK)-wrapped identity was lauded as a silver bullet to solve everything about presenting yourself online—providing verifiable, privacy-preserving proof of personhood without the need to trust governments, platforms, or biometric databases.

But as Ethereum founder Vitalik Buterin argued in June, encryption alone can’t fix “architecture-level” coercion. When identity becomes rigid, centralized, and one-size-fits-all, pseudonymity dies and coercion becomes inevitable.

The risks Vitalik raised in his recent post are not just theoretical. They are the inevitable outcome of systems that try to impose a single, fixed identity on a pluralistic internet. One account per person sounds fair—until it becomes mandatory. Add ZK proofs to the mix, and all you’ve done is encrypt the shackles.

Digital identity is becoming an important issue for governments, as shown by the G7 commissioning a report last year to inform policy, and the EU’s summit in Berlin in June to assess its regulatory framework for electronic identities and trust services.

The Limits of ZK Alone

Zero-knowledge proofs allow users to prove statements—age, residency, uniqueness—without revealing underlying personal data by using cryptographic methods. It’s like showing a sealed envelope that everyone can confirm holds the right answer, without anyone ever opening it. In theory, this should support privacy. But as Vitalik rightly argues, the problem is not what the proofs hide, but what the system assumes.

Most ZK-ID schemes rely on a core design principle: one identity per person. That might make sense for voting or preventing bots. But in real life, people operate across many social contexts—work, family, online, etc.—that don’t map neatly onto a single ID. Enforcing a one-person, one-ID model, even with ZK wrappers, creates a brittle system that’s easy to weaponize.

In such a system, coercion becomes a trivial matter. Employers, governments, or apps can demand that a user reveal all their linked identities. Pseudonymity becomes impossible, especially when IDs are reused across applications or anchored to immutable credentials. Even the illusion of unlinkability breaks down under pressure from machine learning, correlation attacks, or good old-fashioned power.

What began as a privacy tool becomes surveillance infrastructure, but with a nicer interface.

Identity Isn’t the Problem; Uniformity Is

ZK-wrapped systems don’t fail because ZK is flawed; they fail because the surrounding architecture clings to an outdated concept of identity that’s singular, static, and centralized. That’s not how humans operate, and it’s not how the internet works.

The alternative is pluralism. Instead of one global ID that follows you everywhere, imagine a model where you appear differently to each app, platform, or community—provably human and trustworthy, but contextually unique. Your credentials are local, not universal. You’re verifiable without being traceable. And no one, not even you, can be coerced into revealing everything about yourself.

This isn’t a fantasy. It’s already working.

Profile DIDs and the Case for Context-Based Identity

One approach already in production uses per-app Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) so that even colluding platforms can’t link a user’s personas.

It’s a structural fix, not just a cryptographic one. Instead of building global registries that bind people to a single identity, we can anchor trust in pluralistic models featuring decentralized reputation graphs, selective disclosure, unlinkable credentials, and ZK proofs that enforce contextual verification rather than static identifiers.

This system is already used by over 9,000 projects, including TikTok and Deutsche Bank. And it’s not just for humans. The same framework powers Billions Network’s DeepTrust initiative, extending verifiable identity and reputation to AI agents—a necessity in an internet increasingly shaped by autonomous systems.

Don’t Fight Surveillance With Better Locks

Some see identity as a necessary evil—a way to prevent misinformation or spam. But good identity design doesn’t require surveillance. It just requires context.

We don’t need one ID to rule them all. We need systems that let people prove what’s needed, when needed, without turning every interaction into a permanent record. Want to prove you’re not a bot? Fine. Prove uniqueness. Want to prove you’re over 18? Great. Do it without handing over your birthdate, postcode, and biometric template.

Crucially, we must resist the urge to equate compliance with centralization. Systems that use coercive biometrics, rigid registries, or global databases to enforce identity may look efficient. But they introduce potentially catastrophic risks: irreversible breaches, discrimination, exclusion, and even geopolitical misuse. Biometric data can’t be rotated. Static IDs can’t be revoked. Centralized models cannot be made safe; they can only be made obsolete.

Vitalik Is Right, But the Future Is Already Here

Vitalik’s essay warns of a future where identity systems, even when built on the best cryptography, accidentally entrench the very harms they set out to prevent. We share that concern. But we also believe there’s a way forward: one that doesn’t compromise on privacy, enforce uniformity, or turn people into nodes on a global registry.

That path is pluralistic and decentralized, and it’s already live.

Let’s not waste our best cryptographic tools on defending broken ideas. Instead, let’s build the systems that match how people actually live and how we want the internet to work.

The future of digital identity doesn’t need to be universal. It simply needs to be human.

The post Does digital ID have risks even if it’s ZK-wrapped? appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Read Entire Article
Tags: BlockchainCoin SurgesCryptocurrenciesCryptoslateMarket StoriesTrading
Share30Tweet19

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related News

Tributes to ‘best dad in world’ and ‘beautiful’ boy killed in house explosion

Tributes to ‘best dad in world’ and ‘beautiful’ boy killed in house explosion

October 17, 2024
Four people killed in single-vehicle crash in Armagh, police say

Four people killed in single-vehicle crash in Armagh, police say

March 24, 2024
These 13 TV Characters Were Famously Recast, But Which Actor Do You Prefer?

These 13 TV Characters Were Famously Recast, But Which Actor Do You Prefer?

October 15, 2024

Browse by Category

  • Blockchain
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Crypto Market
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Defense
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Health Care
  • Investing
  • Market
  • Politics
  • Strange
  • Technology
  • UK News
  • US News
  • World
WIREOPEDIA

Wireopedia is an automated news feed. The Wireopedia AI pulls from sources with different views so you can see the various sides of different arguments and make a decision for yourself. Wireopedia will be firmly committed to the public interest and democratic values.

Privacy Policy     Terms and Conditions

CATEGORIES

  • Blockchain
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Crypto Market
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Defense
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Health Care
  • Investing
  • Market
  • Politics
  • Strange
  • Technology
  • UK News
  • US News
  • World

BROWSE BY TAG

Bitcoin Bitcoinist Bitcoinmagazine Blockchain Breaking News Business BuzzFeed Celebrity News Coin Surges Cointelegraph Cryptocurrencies Cryptoslate Defense Entertainment Health Care insidebitcoins Market Stories newsbtc Politico Skynews Strange Technology Trading UK US World

RECENT POSTS

  • Capitol agenda: Senate talks sputter, White House aides prep ACA plans
  • Who are the seven prime ministers who have served under France’s Macron?
  • Thousands of homes still without power after Storm Amy
  • Two teenagers jailed over machete killing of 15-year-old boy
  • Security guard reveals new details of Manchester synagogue attack

© 2024 WIREOPEDIA - All right reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Breaking News
  • World
  • UK
  • US
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Defense
  • Health Care
  • Politics
  • Strange
  • Crypto News
  • Contribute!

© 2024 WIREOPEDIA - All right reserved.

  • bitcoinBitcoin(BTC)$124,732.001.17%
  • ethereumEthereum(ETH)$4,590.461.12%
  • rippleXRP(XRP)$3.00-0.22%
  • tetherTether(USDT)$1.000.00%
  • binancecoinBNB(BNB)$1,229.845.73%
  • solanaSolana(SOL)$234.241.35%
  • usd-coinUSDC(USDC)$1.00-0.01%
  • dogecoinDogecoin(DOGE)$0.2609821.91%
  • staked-etherLido Staked Ether(STETH)$4,590.571.22%
  • tronTRON(TRX)$0.3436160.48%
  • cardanoCardano(ADA)$0.86-0.01%
  • wrapped-bitcoinWrapped Bitcoin(WBTC)$124,623.001.05%
  • chainlinkChainlink(LINK)$22.43-0.29%
  • stellarStellar(XLM)$0.4052791.50%
  • avalanche-2Avalanche(AVAX)$30.541.29%
  • bitcoin-cashBitcoin Cash(BCH)$601.170.57%
  • litecoinLitecoin(LTC)$120.080.00%
  • shiba-inuShiba Inu(SHIB)$0.0000130.67%
  • crypto-com-chainCronos(CRO)$0.2100210.01%
  • polkadotPolkadot(DOT)$4.281.12%
  • uniswapUniswap(UNI)$8.310.92%
  • okbOKB(OKB)$227.232.25%
  • daiDai(DAI)$1.000.04%
  • nearNEAR Protocol(NEAR)$3.01-0.68%
  • vechainVeChain(VET)$0.0234981.17%
  • cosmosCosmos Hub(ATOM)$4.19-0.08%
  • algorandAlgorand(ALGO)$0.2250200.47%
  • filecoinFilecoin(FIL)$2.391.47%
  • elrond-erd-2MultiversX(EGLD)$14.031.59%
  • axie-infinityAxie Infinity(AXS)$2.23-0.50%