AI has turned every piece of personal data into a public, spoofable key. Marty Bent's guest, Gerald Glickman, argues the foundational assumption of identity security - that personal information is secret - died decades ago. Fraud managers are now trapped in a losing battle against real-time deepfakes, inferring if someone is real rather than proving it with math.
"Once a biometric database leaks - and Glickman assumes all centralized databases eventually leak - the victim is compromised forever."
- Gerald Glickman, TFTC: A Bitcoin Podcast
Glickman identifies biometric projects like Worldcoin as a particular risk, creating permanent, centralized honeypots of immutable biological data. This creates a vector for authoritarian control where your face becomes a trackable serial number with no reset button. He warns the policy window for defining an alternative, privacy-preserving identity architecture is only open for another year or two, with age verification laws acting as a Trojan horse for state-mandated IDs.
On Plebchain Radio, developers David Strayhorn and Nathan Day are already building that alternative within Nostr, treating proof-of-personhood as a base layer for a decentralized immune system. With AI agents mimicking humans perfectly, they argue the community must verify itself through local social graphs and cryptographic attestations. The goal is to move beyond simple human checks to a "competence layer" where trust is contextual, decentralizing the role of licensing boards for skills from medicine to music.
Parallel development is creating the infrastructure for this new paradigm. On Nostr Compass, hosts detailed how Git Workshop now supports merging pull requests via Nostr, and RoutesterD automates decentralized LLM inference with provider scoring - showing the protocol is maturing into specialized, verifiable marketplaces. These tools provide the technical backbone for a future where identity and reputation are cryptographically proven, not centrally issued.
"The community must verify itself through local social graphs. Authenticity, not just presence, is the new premium."
- David Strayhorn, Plebchain Radio
The race is between two visions: a top-down system of biometric IDs that phones home to the state, and a bottom-up web of trust built on cryptography and selective disclosure. The tools for the latter, like zero-knowledge proofs, exist. The question is whether they can be deployed at scale before the window for choice slams shut.


