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Sam Altman's identity verification project Worldcoin recently made a big move—announcing a partnership with the world's largest dating app Tinder. Now, Tinder users can complete real-person and age verification using World ID.
This may seem small, but it carries significant meaning. This is the first time a mainstream consumer application has widely adopted a cryptographic identity verification system. In simple terms, Tinder has finally found a new way to combat fake accounts, bots, and underage users.
The process is quite straightforward: users find Tinder in the Worldcoin app store and verify themselves with World ID. Think about the logic behind this—Web3 identity tools are no longer confined to the crypto community's internal hype but can genuinely address core issues faced by real-world social platforms.
Tinder has been popular since 2012, relying on the "swipe right to like, swipe left to skip" mechanism to meet the dating needs of countless people worldwide. However, over the years, fake accounts and verification issues have remained a headache. Now, with cryptographic identity systems like World ID, these problems have a new potential solution.
What's even more interesting is that if World ID proves itself in the dating scene, the scope for future expansion is quite large—content moderation on social platforms, anti-fraud verification, creator identity authentication, and even financial transactions and voting systems could all benefit. This is why this partnership is worth paying attention to: it demonstrates a feasible path for cryptographic identity recognition from theory to practical application.