The Gap store in San Francisco's Marina district has quietly installed an Orb, a biometric verification device from Sam Altman's cryptocurrency project World. This addition, unnoticed in initial coverage of the store's November reopening, aims to authenticate human users amid rising online bot concerns. The partnership highlights an unusual blend of retail and crypto technology.
The Gap outlet on Chestnut Street in San Francisco's Marina neighborhood reopened in November following renovations, drawing praise from Mayor Daniel Lurie and local media for its modern aesthetic, including interactive denim displays and AI styling tools. Amid the fanfare, one feature escaped mention: a white, bowling ball-sized globe mounted on a wall track between fleece hoodies and the children's section ramp. This device, equipped with a glowing orange camera eye, is an Orb developed by World, the company founded by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.
World describes itself as 'the real human network,' offering tools like the Worldcoin cryptocurrency, WorldID digital identity, and the World App to verify users as genuine humans. The Orb captures a photo of a person's eyes and face to generate an encrypted 'hash' code, confirming humanity without storing additional personal data. According to a World retail consultant at the store, the process involves scanning a QR code via the app and looking upward into the camera; the photo is deleted immediately after processing.
A plaque near the Orb states: 'At Gap, we believe in originality, authenticity—what makes us human. That’s why we’re partnering with World, to bridge the gap between humans and technology.' Despite this, neither Gap's corporate blog nor World's has publicly detailed the collaboration. An November X post from Worldcoin showed Altman alongside Gap Inc. CEO Richard Dickson, Gap brand president Mark Breitbard, and creative director Zac Posen posing with the device on reopening day. Gap declined comment on the partnership.
Store staff report customer curiosity, with some, including associates, trying the Orb. The consultant noted World's ties to Visa, Razer, and Tinder in Japan, plus a Polymarket betting feature on the app. Visitors can earn $50 in Worldcoin ($WLD) by using Orbs at World's Union Square flagship. No shopping incentives, like discounts, were mentioned for Gap users.
This installation raises questions about retail's role in biometric data collection, especially as World addresses bot proliferation in areas like ticket sales and social media.