Pi Network presents privacy safe human proof at Consensus Miami, with AI identity and zero-knowledge verification in focus.
Pi Network showcased its privacy safe human proof model at a Consensus Miami roundtable focused on AI and digital identity.

The session addressed a growing problem for online platforms. AI tools are making fake accounts harder to detect, while old verification methods often expose private user data.
Pi Network founder Nicolas Kokkalis joined the roundtable to discuss identity in the AI era.
The panel focused on proving real personhood without sharing sensitive information. Kokkalis said online trust is under pressure from bots and AI accounts.
He said many current checks depend on documents, face scans, or personal records.
These systems may confirm identity, but they can also create privacy risks. Pi Network presented decentralized KYC as a different approach.
The model uses zero-knowledge proofs to confirm that a user is real. It does not require platforms to receive raw personal details.
Instead, users can receive private credentials that can be verified.
Kokkalis said these credentials are meant to prove personhood without exposing names or faces.
The system is designed to support privacy and reduce data collection. It also fits Pi Network’s wider focus on user control.
Stephanie Cohen, Chief Strategy Officer at Cloudflare, also spoke during the session.
She discussed the rise of deepfakes, automated traffic, and online abuse. These issues have made trust harder for websites and services.
Cohen said platforms need stronger ways to confirm real users. However, she also said verification should not require giving up privacy.
The discussion connected this concern with zero-knowledge proof technology.
Cloudflare works across internet security, privacy, and infrastructure services.
Because of this role, Cohen’s comments added industry context to the topic. She described identity checks as a growing need for digital platforms.
The panel agreed that personhood and personal data should be kept separate.
This approach could help reduce risk for users and platforms. It may also support safer access to online services.
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Carole House moderated the roundtable and guided the policy discussion. She has worked on cybersecurity, digital finance, and public policy.
Her questions focused on privacy, compliance, and safer identity tools. House said privacy is becoming a baseline issue for digital identity systems.
She noted that heavy collection of sensitive data may face closer review. Regulators are paying more attention to how platforms handle user information.
The discussion also touched on Pi Network’s coming v23 smart contract upgrade.
The update is expected on May 11, according to details shared around the event. Supporters see it as part of Pi Network’s wider ecosystem plan.
At Consensus Miami, Pi Network placed its identity model before a broader crypto audience.
The roundtable tied together AI, blockchain, privacy, and real-person verification. It showed why human proof is becoming a key topic for crypto platforms.
The post Pi Network Showcases Privacy Safe Human Proof at Consensus Miami Roundtable appeared first on Live Bitcoin News.


