Key Points
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Decentralized identity is shifting toward selective disclosure and zero-knowledge proofs to avoid surveillance-style systems.
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Ethereum has become the main testing ground for privacy-preserving identity infrastructure.
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Governments and Big Tech are adopting similar technologies, raising the stakes for how digital identity evolves.
As cryptocurrency moves closer to the center of global finance and digital infrastructure, a quieter but more consequential battle is taking shape around identity, privacy and control. Governments, Big Tech platforms and blockchain networks are converging on digital identity solutions, forcing crypto to confront a defining question for its next phase: how to verify users without turning open networks into surveillance systems.
For years, Vitalik Buterin has warned that adoption alone is not a sufficient measure of success. In recent months, he has sharpened that message, arguing that onboarding users into “walled gardens” risks hollowing out the very purpose of decentralized systems. The goal, in his framing, is not simply to bring people onto blockchains, but to preserve openness, self-sovereignty and resistance to concentrated power.
That philosophy is increasingly shaping how the industry approaches digital identity as crypto heads into 2026.
From Digital IDs to Selective Disclosure
Decentralized identity emerged in 2025 as one of crypto’s most active responses to the rise of digital surveillance. Rather than converging on a single, global identifier, many new systems emphasize selective disclosure, allowing users to prove specific attributes — such as age, uniqueness or compliance — without revealing their full identity.
This shift reflects a growing recognition that identity verification does not need to mean permanent exposure. Zero-knowledge proofs, which allow someone to prove a statement without revealing the underlying data, have become central to this approach. They offer a way to meet regulatory or application requirements while limiting the ability of states or corporations to track users across platforms.
Buterin has been explicit about the risks of getting this wrong. In a June essay, he cautioned that even privacy-preserving IDs can become tools of coercion if too much activity is tied to a single, persistent identifier. His preferred alternative is attribute-based verification, where each application only learns what it strictly needs to know.
Ethereum as the Testing Ground
Unsurprisingly, Ethereum has become the primary laboratory for privacy-preserving identity. In late October, the Ethereum community highlighted that more than 750 privacy-focused projects were building on the network, many centered on credentials, identity and selective disclosure rather than anonymous payments alone.
This focus reflects a broader evolution in crypto privacy. The conversation has shifted from hiding transactions to designing systems that allow participation in regulated environments without defaulting to mass data collection. Buterin has even suggested that figures like Elon Musk could use zero-knowledge proofs on social platforms to demonstrate fairness in content-ranking algorithms without revealing proprietary data.
Beyond Crypto-Native Experiments
Decentralized identity is no longer confined to crypto’s inner circles. Enterprise-focused initiatives gained momentum in 2025, including the launch of IDTrust by The Hashgraph Group on the Hedera network, aimed at governments and institutions exploring digital credentials.
Proof-of-personhood systems also advanced. Sam Altman-backed World continued to expand its World ID protocol, designed to prove that a user is a unique human without sharing personal data. While the system relies on biometric verification, it has drawn ongoing criticism over privacy risks and potential coercion, underscoring the tension between scale and trust.
Industry leaders are taking note. In June, Brian Armstrong described decentralized identity as a core pillar of the internet’s next phase, alongside decentralized social media and prediction markets.
When State Power Enters the Equation
As governments accelerate their own digital identity plans, the stakes are rising. In Switzerland, proposed surveillance reforms earlier this year sparked backlash after privacy-focused firm Proton froze local investments, citing uncertainty over expanded monitoring rules. In December, Swiss lawmakers moved to rein in the proposal, signaling resistance to blanket surveillance.
Elsewhere, zero-knowledge tools are quietly entering mainstream policy. The United Kingdom rolled out age-verification rules alongside a blockchain-based app that proves users are over 18 without revealing identity. In the United States, Google expanded government-issued digital IDs in Google Wallet, including zero-knowledge age verification.
What’s at Stake in 2026
As crypto, governments and Big Tech converge, privacy-preserving identity is no longer a niche ideal — it is becoming infrastructure. The risk is clear: without careful design, digital identity could entrench surveillance. The opportunity is equally large: blockchains and zero-knowledge proofs offer a path to verification without submission.
Whether crypto can defend that path in 2026 may determine whether decentralization remains a meaningful alternative, or simply another layer in an increasingly monitored digital world.
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