- Digital identities today are built on outdated, centralized structures prone to hacks, and IOTA offers a new solution.
- IOTA Identity delivers the building blocks for a global digital trust layer, whether for supply chains, healthcare, or e-government services.
For over half a decade, IOTA has been leading the charge in digital identity, supporting Europe’s Blockchain Services Infrastructure (EBSI) and taking part in the European Blockchain Regulatory Sandbox.
This mission tackles a critical problem: counterfeit activity already costs the global economy some $450 billion each year, and experts warn that figure may more than double before the decade ends.
Today, data moves across borders in seconds, but trust in that data is harder than ever to maintain. From securing online transactions to verifying identities, everything depends on two critical factors. One is data integrity, making sure information hasn’t been tampered with.
The second is data authenticity that proves it really comes from who it claims to. Without those, the digital economy is built on shaky ground.
IOTA and Digital Identity
On an X post, the IOTA team has reminded us of its invention. The IOTA ecosystem took a leap forward earlier this year by launching IOTA Identity, a decentralized, privacy-first identity framework that combines blockchain security with real-world usability.
Unlike traditional identity systems that depend on intermediaries, banks, governments, or corporations, IOTA Identity gives full ownership and control back to users and devices through self-sovereign identity (SSI).
As CNF has previously explained, it is anchored in IOTA’s feeless, immutable ledger and built on W3C’s DID standards. The framework ensures digital interactions are secure, verifiable, and compliant with global identity protocols.
What sets it apart is its technical architecture. The integration of MoveVM, a next-generation virtual machine, brings advanced on-chain logic and programmability. This means developers can build complex identity solutions, from decentralized KYC to IoT device authentication, with the flexibility and scalability needed for real-world adoption.
IOTA Identity avoids exposing sensitive personal or organizational data directly to the ledger. Instead, the identity data itself lives off-chain, stored securely with the user or organization. What gets recorded on the IOTA ledger are only the cryptographic proofs, mathematical commitments that confirm the authenticity and integrity of that data without ever revealing the underlying details.
This architecture strikes a balance between privacy and trust. Users maintain full sovereignty over their identities, deciding when and how to share their information. At the same time, because the cryptographic proofs are immutable and verifiable on-chain, any claims or credentials can be instantly validated by third parties.
Real-World Applications
IOTA Identity opens the door to some very practical, real-world uses. In finance and compliance, it makes tasks like KYC checks faster and less of a headache, while also giving businesses tools like secure digital signatures and stronger safeguards against fraud, all without having to lean on big, centralized middlemen.
In healthcare, it offers a way for hospitals and patients to share medical records safely and privately.
In May, IOTA rolled out its Identity v1.6 Beta at the IOTA East Africa Web3 Innovation Summit in Nairobi. One of the most exciting developments came through a partnership between TokenLabs, ObjectID, and IOTA, where they’re building a system that gives every product its own verifiable digital ID.
These IDs are cryptographically tied both to the brand’s official domain and to a decentralized identifier (DID), creating a secure and transparent way to verify authenticity.
On the market side, IOTA has added 8% gains in the past 24 hours and is now trading around $0.2118, giving it a market cap of about $838 million.