On-chain identity verification has always been a dilemma—you need to prove yourself, but you don’t want to bare it all.
Most current solutions are walking a tightrope: either they sacrifice privacy for data verifiability, or they make the verification process so complex in the name of privacy that it drives users away. It pleases neither side.
What zkPass wants to do is actually quite straightforward: let you use zero-knowledge proofs to tell others, “Yes, I am who I say I am,” without disclosing any data at all.
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On-chain identity verification has always been a dilemma—you need to prove yourself, but you don’t want to bare it all.
Most current solutions are walking a tightrope: either they sacrifice privacy for data verifiability, or they make the verification process so complex in the name of privacy that it drives users away. It pleases neither side.
What zkPass wants to do is actually quite straightforward: let you use zero-knowledge proofs to tell others, “Yes, I am who I say I am,” without disclosing any data at all.