Kenya forms parliamentary committee to investigate Worldcoin

Share This Post

The controversial crypto project’s launch has been marred into controversy, and it’s already facing investigations in nearly half a dozen countries.

The Worldcoin cryptocurrency project has run into another roadblock — this time in Kenya, where the government has formed a 15-member parliamentary committee to investigate the controversial asset.

The Kenyan government formed a 15-member committee headed by Narok West Member of Parliament Gabriel Tongoyo to look into the controversial crypto project, reported a local daily. The parliamentary committee has 42 days to investigate the project and submit its report to the House committee.

Cointelegraph reached out to the MP to get some insights into his concerns and case against Worldcoin but didn’t get a response by publishing time.

The parliamentary investigation into the crypto project comes nearly three weeks after Kenya suspended Worldcoin’s operations after the project failed to comply with government orders to stop scanning users’ iris.

The Interior Cabinet Secretary Kithure Kindiki, who has played a key role in suspending Worldcoin operations, told the House committee that the government is concerned by Worldcoin’s activities registering citizens and collecting iris data, all of which he claims pose serious security risks.

Related: Worldcoin launch sparks debate over data privacy and future of AI

Apart from the parliamentary committee, the Worldcoin project has faced an all-out rejection from the various regulatory bodies in Kenya. The court also suspended Worldcoin’s activities after a case filed by the office of the data commissioner. The court ordered that the data already collected by Worldcoin between April last year and August 2023 must be preserved pending completion of the lawsuit.

Worldcoin, a digital ID-focused crypto project that offers its native cryptocurrency, WLD coin, for scanning the iris of users, launched amid controversies and hype. The project onboarded nearly 2 million users during its trial phase. However, as the project launched for the public in more than a dozen countries, various reports of the project’s controversial tactics surfaced, prompting governments in Nigeria, the United Kingdom, Argentina, Germany and Kenya to investigate the project.

Magazine: ‘Moral responsibility’: Can blockchain really improve trust in AI?

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

Vaneck’s 2025 Crypto Predictions: Bull Market to Persist, Anti-Crypto Policies Ending

Asset management firm Vaneck has shared its 2025 crypto predictions, highlighting a strong bull market, rising bitcoin and ethereum prices, growing altcoins, and increased institutional and

XRP Lawsuit Reaches 4 Years as Ripple Pushes Trump to Reform SEC

Ripple is calling on the SEC to rebuild trust as its four-year legal fight over XRP persists, with hopes for policy shifts under incoming leadership Ripple Urges SEC to Rebuild Credibility Amid XRP

Stephen Miran to Lead Trump’s Economic Team: What It Means for Bitcoin’s Future

On Sunday, President-elect Donald J Trump revealed that Stephen Miran, who previously served during Trump’s first term, will helm the Council of Economic Advisers Miran is seen as a pro-bitcoin

Infomon Blends Pokémon Go With NFTs and X Integration

Imagine Pokémon Go but with NFT ownership, token rewards, and social media integration—welcome to Infomon, a revolutionary Web3 game that brings AR to the blockchain Quick Recap from OpenSeason

Bitcoin $178K Target In Sight? Analyst Highlights Bollinger Band Retest Mirroring Jan. 2024 Rally

Bitcoin has been on a correction path since it reached a new all-time high of $108,135 on December 17 Notably, this correction has seen the leading cryptocurrency decline by about 10% up until the

‘$600M Would Buy a Lot of Bitcoin’: Microstrategy Boss Steers Bezos Wedding Drama Toward Crypto

Michael Saylor, co-founder and executive chairman of Microstrategy, brought bitcoin into the spotlight during an online exchange with Jeff Bezos on X The Amazon founder found himself in the headlines