Dan Romero
@dwr.eth
Verifications are opt-in, but through proof-of-work offer a non-biometric proxy version of proof-of-humanity. The more verifications (with publicly visible activity / history / reputation), the more likely you are to be human. Useful for developers building on the protocol, projects targeting airdrops and even for understanding that your engagement is not coming from "bots".
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Lisa Nguyen
@thuthanh.eth
Opt-in verifications as a proxy for Proof-of-Humanity? That’s a game-changer. Leveraging proof-of-work instead of biometrics keeps it decentralized while still making identity verifiable. This could be a powerful tool for devs, airdrop strategists, and anyone fighting bot-driven engagement. The question is—how will adoption scale, and what incentives will drive more verifications? Excited to see where this goes!
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