Humanity Protocol has announced that its mainnet is officially live, delivering a unified identity layer that connects familiar Web2 credentials with decentralized Web3 services through zero-knowledge Transport Layer Security (zkTLS). zkTLS lets individuals prove they have viewed verifiable information such as a LinkedIn job title or a university transcript without revealing the page itself, ensuring sensitive data never leaves the user’s browser.

At launch, travellers can link frequent-flyer and loyalty accounts from major airlines and hotel groups, including Delta, Emirates, Singapore Airlines, Marriott and Hilton, directly to their Human ID, creating a portable reputation that spans both Web2 and Web3 applications. Financial, educational and professional credentials are also supported, enabling users to prove creditworthiness, degrees or job titles while maintaining full privacy.

“Our mainnet release turns decentralized identity into practical infrastructure,” said Terence Kwok, CEO and Founder of Humanity Protocol. “With zkTLS now live, anyone can confirm who they are and what they have achieved across multiple platforms, yet no central party ever sees their personal information. This is how we move the Internet toward a future that respects both human authenticity and individual privacy.”

For developers, the network opens a path to build sybil-resistant social platforms, reputation-based marketplaces and AI guardrails that verify humanity at the source without collecting surveillance data. Humanity Protocol will continue rolling out node infrastructure in new regions and collaborating with partners in areas such as on-chain ticketing, DePIN and decentralized governance to expand credential formats and use cases.