# Zoom partners with Sam Altman's World to verify human participants amid deepfake threats

_Saturday, April 18, 2026 at 2:13 AM EDT · AI, Cybersecurity, Tech & Business · Latest · Tier 2 — Notable_

![Zoom partners with Sam Altman's World to verify human participants amid deepfake threats — Primary](https://cdn0.tnwcdn.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/1/files/2026/04/zoom-world-id-deep-face-verify-human-meetings-deepfake.png)

Zoom has integrated with World, the biometric identity company co-founded by Sam Altman, to let video meeting participants verify they are human and not AI-generated deepfakes.

The partnership uses World's Deep Face technology, which cross-references a participant's live video feed against an iris-scanned biometric profile. When a match succeeds, a "Verified Human" badge appears next to the person's name. Meeting hosts can enable a Deep Face waiting room that requires verification before entry, and participants can request others to verify themselves during calls.

The feature addresses growing concerns about deepfake-enabled corporate fraud. In early 2024, engineering firm Arup lost $25 million after an employee authorized wire transfers during a video call where every other participant turned out to be AI-generated deepfakes of colleagues. Across the industry, deepfake fraud cost businesses over $200 million in just the first quarter of 2025, with average losses per incident exceeding $500,000.

World's verification system requires users to have a World ID, obtained by visiting one of the company's physical Orb devices for iris scanning. The network has approximately 18 million verified users across 160 countries and about 1,500 active Orbs. This represents a small fraction of Zoom's user base, positioning the feature for high-stakes calls rather than everyday meetings.

The Deep Face approach differs from existing deepfake detection tools on Zoom's marketplace, which analyze video frames for signs of AI manipulation. Zoom and World say frame-by-frame detection is becoming less reliable as video generation models improve. Deep Face instead verifies identity against a biometric record, sidestepping the need to detect synthetic media.

World's Orb-based system faces regulatory challenges in multiple jurisdictions. Spain's data protection authority issued a formal warning in February 2026 citing GDPR violations, Germany ordered iris data deletion in December 2024, and the Philippines issued a cease-and-desist order in October 2025. Investigations or suspensions have also occurred in Argentina, Kenya, Hong Kong, and Indonesia.

For Zoom, the partnership represents a defensive move to maintain enterprise trust as competitors add AI features. The company reported $4.67 billion in revenue for fiscal 2025 with 3% growth. For World, the Zoom integration offers distribution beyond crypto-adjacent early adopters into corporate security use cases.

The integration reflects how deepfake threats have escalated from theoretical concerns to billion-dollar risks, making human verification a legitimate enterprise security priority despite privacy and adoption challenges.

## Sources

- [The Next Web](https://thenextweb.com/news/zoom-world-id-deep-face-verify-human-meetings-deepfake)

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Canonical: https://techandbusiness.org/newswire/08EUFJXk3wQgRnqiEqrAFm
Retrieved: 2026-04-19T01:21:02.223Z
Publisher: Tech & Business (techandbusiness.org)
