Cashstrapped Argentines queue up for eyeball scans
Argentines eyeing a financial boost are lining up by the thousands to have their irises scanned in exchange for a few crypto tokens as part of an online biometrics project under scrutiny in several countries.
Some three million people worldwide have so far provided their iris data to Worldcoin, an initiative of OpenAI chief Sam Altman, but few have embraced the project more fervently than Argentines.
Halfamillion people in the South American nation have participated since Worldcoin launched last July, and queues for scans have grown longer in recent months of fastshrinking disposable income.
“I did it because I don’t have any money, for no other reason,” 64yearold martial arts teacher Juan Sosa told AFP after staring for a few seconds into a silver irisscanning orb roughly the size of a bowling ball at one of 250 Worldcoin locations across Argentina.
Digital identification
The project seeks to use these iris specs — unique to each person on Earth — to develop a digital identification system, a sort of passport that will guarantee the holder is a real human being and not a bot, thus securing online transactions.
Volunteers do not provide any other information such as their name, address or phone number.
The personal iris data is encrypted and, according to Worldcoin, safe.
Yet Kenya, Spain and Portugal have ordered it to pause collecting biometric data on their territories pending investigations by numerous countries into possible privacy concerns.
Argentina’s own Agency for Access to Public Information has said it is verifying Worldcoin’s “security measures” with a view to “protecting the privacy of the users.”
It has yet to make a ruling and has not suspended data collection.
“There are people going through very tough times, where one salary is not enough. That is why they do these things,” Miriam Marrero, a 42yearold supermarket cashier, said after being scanned in Buenos Aires.
Affordability
“Sometimes, to have a roof over your head, you need to do other things to be able to afford it. Otherwise, in Argentina today, you can’t afford a roof.”
For volunteering their data, initial participants receive 10 tokens each of Worldcoin’s own cryptocurrency, the WLD.
In Argentina, with its notoriously unstable exchange rate, the value differs wildly; when Sosa and
Marrero received theirs, 10 tokens were worth the equivalent of about $80.
‘Out of necessity’
Natalia Zuazo, a technology policy specialist and director of digital consulting firm Salto Agencia, told AFP Worldcoin was attracting most volunteers in “countries in crisis... the poorest countries, because people are more likely to enter into such transactions.”
Argentina today battles annual inflation over 200% at a time selfdescribed “anarchocapitalist” President Javier Milei has slashed transport and energy subsidies and wageearners lost a fifth of their purchasing power.
In Worldcoin’s own words, it seeks to become
“the world’s largest privacypreserving human identity and financial network,” providing “universal access to the global economy no matter your country or background.” The company insists it never has and never will sell personal data.
But the initiative has triggered alarm bells, with regulators worldwide concerned about the collection, storage and use of personal information.
According to Zuazo, personspecific biometric data such as iris specs are “ultrasensitive” and could theoretically be employed for nefarious identification purposes. “I don’t think people do not understand the implications,” she said. “They just do it out of necessity.”