Eye-Scanning Crypto Dates: Is Sam Altman’s World Reinventing Love on Tinder?
Sam Altman’s World partners with Match Group to bring iris-scanning IDs to dating apps. Will this spark a crypto-dating revolution?

On May 1, 2025, Sam Altman’s blockchain project, World (formerly Worldcoin), announced a groundbreaking partnership with Match Group, the company behind Tinder, Hinge, and OkCupid, as reported by crypto.news. This collaboration, starting with a pilot in Japan, will use World’s iris-scanning technology to verify user ages on Tinder, aiming to enhance trust and safety in online dating.
World, co-founded by OpenAI’s Sam Altman, uses eye-scanning “orbs” to create a unique World ID, rewarding users with WLD tokens. Launched in the U.S. on May 1, it’s now expanding with 7,500 orbs across cities like San Francisco and Miami. The project seeks to prove “humanness” in an AI-driven world, ensuring real people, not bots, are behind online profiles. The Match Group partnership integrates this tech into dating apps, potentially reducing catfishing and fake accounts.
For beginners, this move shows how crypto can solve real-world problems like online fraud. Verified IDs could make dating safer, encouraging more users to join platforms like Tinder. However, privacy concerns linger—South Korea fined World nearly $1 million for data handling issues, and X posts reflect unease about iris scans. If successful, this could boost WLD’s value and mainstream crypto adoption, but regulatory hurdles could slow progress.
The Japan pilot is just the start. If it works, World ID could roll out across Match Group’s apps globally, reshaping how we connect online. For now, investors should watch WLD’s trajectory and privacy debates closely.