Identity as Currency: Why are we selling our sovereignty for peanuts?
There is no centralized database that won't be hacked. There are only databases that haven't been hacked yet. Biometrics don't expire. Once stolen, it's stolen forever....
Do you want a domain name while paying with crypto? Get ready to hand over your biometric footprint. This is the reality today when you try to make a simple 15-dollar online purchase. And it is not just about domains. The same scenario repeats obsessively: you want access to an API, a software subscription, or a digital wallet, and you are met with the same abusive requirements. A registrar or a service provider asks for your ID, asks for a facial scan, and treats you like a potential criminal while you are just trying to buy a digital resource with money you already extracted from a banking system. This Know Your Customer procedure has long since ceased to have any real connection to anti-money laundering. It has become a method of control and massive data collection, an extension of state surveillance that has contaminated the private sector, and we have become accustomed to viewing this as a normal cost of digital existence.
The most serious problem with this entire compliance mechanism is the systemic vulnerability it creates. Platforms that impose these requirements effectively become honey pots for hackers. Think about what they store: IDs, passports, facial scans, your browsing history, the link between your real identity and your virtual one. All this data is stored in central databases, protected by security promises that have been systematically breached over the last decade. It is not a question of if these databases will be compromised, but when. And when it happens, the damage is not just financial; it is existential.
When you hand your identity over to such an entity, you are not just making a temporary concession for a service. You are assuming the risk that your identity, your biometrics, could be exposed in a security breach from which there is no return. You cannot reset your face or your fingerprints the way you reset a password. Once this data has left their servers through a cyberattack, it becomes consumer goods on the black market for all eternity. It is a permanent exposure, a fingerprint of your vulnerability that you can never erase.
It is an unequal exchange, a contract of adhesion where you offer your digital sovereignty in exchange for a temporary utility. And the system knows exactly what it is doing. It profiles you, turning you from an autonomous individual into a set of data easy to quantify, to sell, and, above all, to restrict. KYC has become the tool through which centralized entities want to know everything about you: from your consumption habits to your contact networks and ideological leanings.
Have we ever wondered what happens when all this data unites? When your browsing history meets your financial history and your biometrics? The result is a de facto social credit system. Your access to certain services or resources is conditioned by your compliance score, and everything is orchestrated through this monopoly of identity that tech giants protect with sanctity.
Fortunately, there is a way out. Blockchain technology, and ecosystems like Hive, offer us the chance to regain our autonomy without passing through this purgatory of compliance. Here, your content belongs to you, your keys are yours, and identity is not a currency for giants. On the blockchain, we build based on proof of authority and personal sovereignty, not on permission received from an entity that considers you just a number in a vulnerable database.
Every ID sent, every facial scan accepted, is a brick laid in the wall of our own digital prison. Resistance does not mean begging for rights from those who have turned us into commodities, but building outside their walls. We do not need their permission to be sovereign. Every line of code written on the blockchain, every transaction made outside their control systems, is an act of rebellion. Identity is not requested; it is exercised. And if they want to buy our sovereignty for 15 dollars, the answer is simple: we are not for sale.
Your identity is not a product. Build your own sovereignty or become part of theirs.