Why should we give up privacy just to prove 'I am a real person'?

This question went unanswered — until Humanityprot appeared.

That day in the beggar's group, while practicing dog stick techniques and chatting, we talked about how various platforms are using all sorts of KYC verification methods to prevent studios from brushing airdrops.

One group member mentioned he was even asked to take a 'photo in front of his door' for identity verification... 😅 We all laughed, but it actually made us uneasy.

🤔 Think back, when did we start giving up too much online just to prove 'I am me':

CAPTCHA, increasingly complex password combinations, phone numbers, ID cards, selfies... Even when you request a withdrawal, the platform asks you to hold your ID card up to the camera and spin around.

We have compromised for too long, and no one has spoken for us.

The reason I bring this up is that today, while promoting, I noticed many bloggers in the English-speaking area discussing the Humanityprot project. They are talking about it because they announced an airdrop of $2.2 million worth of $H tokens to the KaitoAI ecosystem.

I clicked in to take a look and found that this project not only has 'airdrops', but it also really has meaning.

🔸 Known as the 'Real Person Chain', Humanityprot has a simple mission: to prove that you are a real human being in the lightest and safest way.

❌ No need to upload privacy

❌ No need to fill out a ton of information

🔸 You only need to:

✅ Generate your exclusive 'Human ID'

✅ Connect to your X account

✅ Scan your palm print

It's that simple, and you have an on-chain identity.

We've been fighting in Web3 for so long, who hasn't been disgusted by robots?

Snatching whitelist spots, brushing airdrops, participating in project public offerings, when was it not a battle between humans and machines? 😾

Even by the end, you haven't even seen the mint button clearly, and it's already sold out.

Robots eat meat, and we can't even have the soup 😾

But Humanity Protocol is different. It can help project teams identify real users and keep rewards for those who genuinely participate.

This is not just an upgrade in experience, but a return to fairness.

Robot attacks and witchcraft have long been a cancer in the industry that cannot be cured. It makes it impossible for projects to determine who the truly active users are, and it allows incentives that should belong to the community to fall into the hands of a few manipulators.

😇 And I see that Humanity Protocol offers a new possibility:

Use your 'palm print', this privacy-friendly biometric feature, to achieve seamless login across multiple chains, as convenient as Web2 and as secure as Web3.

It even accumulates proof for future work and community contributions, giving you your own 'on-chain human file' to guard against witchcraft and identity theft.

The most important thing is: you are human, and that alone should be enough.

🔸 Note: The last project of this type was Worldcoin.