Worldcoin Could Enable Wider Distribution of Crypto Than Even Bitcoin, Says CoinFund
Worldcoin could eventually onboard "billions of users" to crypto markets, said a partner at the venture capital firm.
"One of the core propositions of Worldcoin is to build a system that can create a distribution of a cryptocurrency that's even wider around the world than bitcoin is today," Brukhman said.
Worldcoin could onboard "billions of users" to crypto markets, said Austin Barack, a partner at CoinFund, in a blog post this week. Prior to the launch, Worldcoin had a little over two million verified users worldwide, and as of the time of writing, 941,000 World App wallets have been created, according to a Dune analytics dashboard on the project.
Read more: I Had My Iris Scanned by the Worldcoin Orb, and It Wasn't as Scary as I Expected
At its core, Worldcoin is an identity protocol, aiming to verify that users are unique and human using iris scans, artificial intelligence and zero-knowledge proofs.
The network launched on Monday, sparking questions around privacy and its tokenomics.
That hasn't stopped people from signing up, however. Altman claimed on Twitter Wednesday that one person signs up every eight seconds around the world.
At launch, the protocol is moving from Polygon to Optimism, a Layer 2 ethereum scaling solution, and users have been prompted to update their apps so that they can create Optimism wallets and transfer their beta tokens to the new blockchain.
Read more: Worldcoin Hype Causes Optimism to Leapfrog Arbitrum in Daily Transactions
CoinFund invested in Worldcoin in February 2021 in its series A round alongside heavyweights such as a16z and Multicoin Capital, according to Crunchbase.
"What attracted CoinFund to Worldcoin is its large global visionand Web 3-focused technology," Brukhman said Thursday.
The CEO said he's not worried about the token not being available in the U.S. at the moment due to regulatory concerns, and believes that WLD will eventually be available stateside.
Read more: Worldcoin Token Slumps Amid Crypto Community Unease
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Ultan Miller touts a blockchain-based pre-IPO index, while critics warn unauthorized equity tokenization risks legal and investor fallout.
What to know:
- Hecto Finance aims to build a tokenized index of pre-IPO "Hectocorn" companies like OpenAI, SpaceX and ByteDance, giving public investors on-chain exposure to elite private firms.
- Supporters say such tokenization could broaden access to high-growth private markets, but critics warn that doing so without issuer consent risks legal uncertainty, weak investor protections and reputational damage.
- The clash between Hecto’s vision and concerns raised by industry figures, alongside episodes like Robinhood’s disputed OpenAI tokens, underscores how tokenized private equity is outpacing regulatory clarity and corporate buy-in.













