Today marks the launch of Season 2 of HUMN onchain SUMR, the latest chapter in human.tech’s push to make Web3 a place where real people, not bots or noise, set Today marks the launch of Season 2 of HUMN onchain SUMR, the latest chapter in human.tech’s push to make Web3 a place where real people, not bots or noise, set

Human.tech Kicks Off Season 2 of HUMN onchain SUMR

human tech

Today marks the launch of Season 2 of HUMN onchain SUMR, the latest chapter in human.tech’s push to make Web3 a place where real people, not bots or noise, set the tone. The new phase reframes the project’s early success: Season 1 proved that privacy-preserving human verification can work at scale, and Season 2 asks a different question, not just “are you human?” but “what will you do with that humanity?”

Season 1 was, by any measure, a breakthrough. Thousands of participants used Human Passport to build verifiable presence onchain, and the campaign turned a once-abstract idea, proving identity without surveillance, into functioning infrastructure across multiple networks. Human Passport has already become a core piece of that infrastructure, offering real-world verification flows and the option to mint Humanity Scores and stamps onchain across chains like Base, Arbitrum, Optimism, Linea, zkSync and Scroll. That foundation is what Season 2 will build on.

From Verification to Contribution

The big shift this season is from verification to contribution. Human Passport remains the scaffold; verification still matters, but the campaign now explicitly invites people to move beyond the gate. Participants are encouraged to sign shared principles, create and submit artifacts of their thinking or work, review others’ contributions, and help curate a shared culture. The pace is intentionally flexible: you can dip in for a quick commitment or double down and help shape long-term direction.

At the heart of Season 2 is The Covenant of Humanistic Technologies, a living charter that positions itself as a human-first alternative to extraction-driven systems. The Covenant is designed to be three things at once: a set of evolving principles that center human values in tech, a community-shaped corpus of essays, art and research, and the structural framework for an emerging DAO that will eventually govern grants and guide the movement’s priorities.

Season 2 is therefore as much about culture and governance as it is about identity verification. The campaign’s organizers are explicit about who they want at the table: builders, creators, thinkers, and curious humans. The ask is straightforward: sign The Covenant, verify your humanity via Human Passport, express yourself by submitting artifacts and ideas, and participate in governance as the DAO takes shape.

The aim is to seed a participatory culture where privacy, presence and meaningful participation are the axes around which value is created. Why this matters beyond the immediate community is simple. As automated accounts, deepfakes and attention-economy tricks proliferate, any digital system that claims to serve people must be able to recognize and reward real human engagement without turning users into data points.

Season 1 showed that this approach is feasible; Season 2 sets out to prove that a human-centered identity layer can produce real culture and collective decision-making, not just lists of verified addresses. If you want to take part, visit manifest.human.tech to read The Covenant and find out how to join. The message from the movement is intentionally simple and emotional: humanity is contagious. Manifest humanity. Be HUMN.

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