The Good Tech Companies - Vitalik Sparks Debate About ZKP-Based Digital IDs After Blog Criticism
Episode Date: July 2, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/vitalik-sparks-debate-about-zkp-based-digital-ids-after-blog-criticism. Why is Vitalik Buter...in concerned about ZKP digital IDs? Discover how privacy, security, and practicality issues affect token-based UBI systems. Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #web3, #blockchain, #dlt, #cryptocurrency, #zkp, #ethereum, #good-company, #holonym, and more. This story was written by: @ishanpandey. Learn more about this writer by checking @ishanpandey's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Why is Vitalik Buterin concerned about ZKP digital IDs? Discover how privacy, security, and practicality issues affect token-based UBI systems.
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Vitalik sparks debate about ZKP-based digital IDs after blog criticism, by Aishan Pandey.
The rise of zero-knowledge proofs, ZKP, in Web 3 has been difficult to ignore in recent years.
One person who certainly hasn't overlooked the technology isotherium co-founder Vitalik Buterin,
who trained his forensic gaze on ZKP-based digital identity systems in his latest blog.
Although ZK tech is widely used in the Ethereum ecosystem, notably in the form of zero-knowledge
rollups to support scaling, Buterin didn't bang the drum or tuck up any ZK projects that
had caught his eye.
In fact, Ethereum wasn't mentioned once in the 3000 plus word article. Instead,
Buterin made several criticisms of ZK-wrapped identities, arguing that, attempting to uphold
a one-identity-per-person property, entails risks such as loss of privacy and vulnerability
to coercion. ZKPs also failed to solve non-privacy risks such as errors, he claimed. World ID
and the limits of token-based UBI turning his attention to World ID, formerly
World Coin, the biometric-based project that uses crypto to compel users to have their
eyeballs scanned, heredected the idea that such projects could form the basis of a universal
basic income, UBI.
I do not expect such tokens to be worth anywhere close to enough to pay for Apperson's subsistence,"
he stated bluntly, adding that, the realistic problem that such mini-UB is solve is giving
people access to a sufficient quantity of cryptocurrency to make a few basic on-chain
transactions and online purchases.
The idea of tying a secure digital ID to financial or humanitarian aid, UBI, subsidies, grants,
is one that has a groundswell of support,
and many believe ZKPs can help to make this idea a reality.
The Taiwanese government is already leveraging zero-knowledge proofs to secure digital IDEs,
while Google has integrated the tech into its mobile wallet, ensuring age verification across
mobile devices, apps, such as Bumble, and websites using its digital credential
API.
So, are on-chain digital identity systems equipped with ZKPs really our best chance
of reaching a point where aid can be provably dispensed to the needy, rather than bots or
fraudsters?
After all, ZKPs align with the principle of least privilege, allowing users to prove specific
claims without exposing their irredentity.
But what about those criticisms? ZKPs are not a silver bullet on their own, they still leave data traces behind. Especially when attestations are made on public blockchains,
says Shady El Damati, co-founder of decentralized identity project Holonym.
Private state, unlinked addresses, and careful data management can help augment privacy,
however the risk of giving up your nullifier is the same as the risk of losing your private
key.
So the issue is not with ZKPs but rather overall self-custody security practices.
This is why we have designed a 2 PC model that assumes security for the user evan when
their device is compromised, adds co-founder Nanak Nihal Singh Khalsa.
This means a user must authenticate their identity with multiple independent methods
to claim funds or submit a transaction.
Streamlining aid with CryptoRails Holonym takes a different approach to world, in that
it can theoretically bay us to link up existing aid with identity rather than combining the
two.
There's an existing humanitarian aid network already out there, so why not upgrade their
capacities rather than use UBI as a marketing tool to justify a token's utility or valuation?
asks El Damati.
Naturally, Singh Khalsa concurs.
Token-based UBI models are out of touch with the real world and people who most need basic-level
support to meet their needs, he says.
As well as token prices being volatile, making what one can buy change based on daily price
swings, the value of such assets tends to decline without meaningful utility or demand.
Another problem is that UBI tokens need to be off-ramped in exchange to cash, and those
who need the tokens the most will likely experience great difficulty off-ramping, or they'll have
to pay large fees to do so," says El Damati.
Hollenum's, Human, Tech framework allows existing humanitarian aid to run more efficiently on crypto-rails. Aid recipients can create digital wallets from their social accounts, WhatsApp,
Facebook, secure them with simple biometrics, and directly receive payments in the form of stablecoins.
Human, Tech also let said programs request identity proofs to measure proof of impact and reduce
false claims, while Holonym partners with local off-ramps to keep fees low for users.
Buterin's criticism of one-person-one-ID stems from his belief that if a single ZKID
system were to dominate the market, reversion to this model would undermine pseudonymity
and increase coercion risks.
Singh Khalsa certainly appreciates this perspective, noting that,
the design of one-person-one-ID typically serves goals for centralized systems that seek to control
or capture the value of identity into a walled garden. In other words, users enjoy more freedom
and flexibility when, rather than being locked into one identity, multiple can be created.
freedom and flexibility when, rather than being locked into one identity, multiple can be created.
ZKPs can be used to generate multiple identities if designed well with the user in mind, says
El Damati.
Revocation, control over privately linked addresses, and private addresses can all extend
the pluralism of ZKPs.
Buterin's warnings have certainly sparked debate about ZK-wrapped identities and their
applicability to aid distribution, particularly where privacy and security are concerned.
Expect this debate to rumble on, and for alternative approachesto token-based UBIs like World to
continue stating their case.
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