Worldcoin Meets AdTech: Human-Verified Campaigns Beat Bots, CTRs Jump 50%
Japanese ad firm Hakuhodo raised click-through rates 50% in a pilot using human verification and blockchain to eliminate bot traffic, offering new approach to digital ad fraud.
Human verification technology has proven to improve digital ad performance by increasing click-through rates by 50 percent while cutting exposure to fraudulent traffic.
Japanese advertising giant Hakuhodo partnered with Tools for Humanity and LG Electronics for the pilot. The program targeted a persistent industry problem: distinguishing real users from bots.
The Bots Problem
Digital advertisers have long struggled with fraudulent traffic that inflates impression counts while delivering no actual engagement. Industry estimates suggest a substantial portion of global ad spend—running into billions of dollars—is wasted on non-human impressions generated by increasingly sophisticated bot networks.
Traditional solutions have proved inadequate as AI-driven fraud evolves faster than detection methods. Hakuhodo’s approach took a different tack: rather than trying to identify bots, the company focused on verifying humans. The pilot used Tools for Humanity’s World ID protocol to confirm participants were real people. Each verified impression was logged to LG’s blockchain infrastructure.
The setup ensured advertisers paid only for impressions delivered to confirmed humans—a simple premise with potentially far-reaching implications for how digital ads are bought and sold.
Testing at Scale
More than 3,500 participants and over ten advertisers across electronics, travel, food, cosmetics, and education sectors joined the pilot. Hakuhodo integrated its “boba” mini-app with World ID verification and LG’s blockchain ledger, creating a closed loop where only human-verified users received ads and every impression was recorded on-chain.
The results were striking: campaigns targeting verified users showed click-through rates approximately 50 percent higher than conventional campaigns. Bounce rates—the percentage of visitors who leave immediately—dropped by around 15 percentage points, indicating deeper engagement with advertised content.
In a separate trial, Hakuhodo introduced a “Watch-to-Earn” feature that rewarded participants with points for viewing ads. This incentive mechanism drove CTR even higher, demonstrating that modest rewards can meaningfully influence user behavior when combined with verified identity infrastructure.
Broader Implications
The pilot arrives as advertisers worldwide grapple with measurement challenges posed by fraudulent traffic and AI-generated activity that increasingly mimics human behavior. Blockchain and identity verification are not new to digital advertising. However, their combination in this trial produced measurable performance improvements. The results went beyond theoretical benefits.
The approach raises questions about scalability and user adoption. Privacy-preserving verification requires users to actively participate in identity confirmation processes, which may limit reach compared to traditional ad networks. Cost considerations also remain unclear—blockchain transaction fees and verification infrastructure could offset savings from reduced fraud, depending on implementation.
Neither LG Electronics nor Tools for Humanity has published independent English-language commentary on the pilot at the time of reporting. Hakuhodo conducted the trial primarily in Japan, though its methodology may inform similar initiatives in markets where advertisers are seeking more verifiable metrics.
Market Context
The pilot unfolded against a backdrop of volatility in the Web3 ecosystem. Worldcoin (WLD), the token associated with Tools for Humanity, traded at $0.96 as of publishing, down from $1.35 earlier in the week after touching a low of $0.89 on October 11. The price movements reflected broader market trends and investor sentiment rather than any direct connection to the advertising trial.

Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Uniswap launches L2 (Unichain), what does it mean for Ethereum?
As is well known, the emergence of L2 solutions allows smaller, independent blockchains to leverage the deep liquidity available on the Ethereum chain. Moreover, for DeFi...

Why Ethereum Needs ZK-VM: The Ultimate Path to Scalability
Among the various approaches to Ethereum scaling, ZK is the most complex and crucial direction. Looking across the entire network, Vitalik Buterin and the Ethereum Foundation are making significant bets on ZK...

Crypto markets tumble amid US regional bank stress, prolonged government shutdown

EIGEN Large Unlock Incoming: 10% Market Cap Dilution Each Month, Smart Money Exits Early
The article, based on on-chain data analysis, points out that the recent sharp decline of the $EIGEN token (a 53% plunge on October 10) is not merely a result of market panic, but rather a manifestation of a deeper underlying issue. The real core risk lies in the massive and continuous token unlocks over the next two years, which will exert tremendous selling pressure. The smartest and most profitable traders had already anticipated this and systematically exited their positions weeks before the market crash.

Trending news
MoreCrypto prices
More








