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Glyph Partners With 3 Crypto Firms for Accredited-Investor Checks

With many decentralized-identity efforts facing adoption challenges, Glyph's first step – accredited-investor checks – is intentionally niche.

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Decentralized identity startup Glyph is partnering with a trio of digital securities companies to make their approaches to ID verification more convenient – particularly for accredited investors.

“Our technology handles any identity use case but we are very focused on accredited investors,” founder James Greaves told CoinDesk. In short, Greaves hopes accredited-investor checks become as easy as ordering a book on Amazon (the e-commerce giant's first use case).

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Revealed to CoinDesk, Glyph’s technology is being integrated by Polymath, Swarm and Dealbox – three sites for managing digital securities. It’s the first announcement to date from Glyph, which was launched in 2017 in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and Greaves says Glyph will soon announce up to six additional partners.

Identity has become a crowded space in crypto, with companies like Civic, Sovrin, uPort and others offering ways for users to control how their information is shared online.

“Identity is one of the most important missing pieces of Web 3 infrastructure,” 1confirmation investor Richard Chen wrote in a recent overview of the space.

Yet with some ID efforts facing adoption challenges, Greaves says Glyph’s approach is intentionally targeted.

“Let’s just start with accredited-investor checks,” Greaves said. “Most identity companies try to come in and own the whole piece.”

For Polymath, Glyph becomes one of two services for verifying accredited investors, the high-net-worth individuals who by law have greater leeway in investing in securitized assets. By most estimates, roughly 10 million households in the U.S. meet the income criteria required of accredited investors.

Polymath’s Graeme Moore says integrating third-party services makes it easier for people to interact with the platform, which is used to launch tokens that comply with current securities laws.

“When you have to get your accreditation status checked every 90 days that can be a real pain,” Moore said. “Glyph does a better job than most solutions we’ve seen in terms of allowing investors to control their own identity.”

Social Security card image via Shutterstock

Zack Seward

Zack Seward is CoinDesk’s contributing editor-at-large. Up until July 2022, he served as CoinDesk’s deputy editor-in-chief. Prior to joining CoinDesk in November 2018, he was the editor-in-chief of Technical.ly, a news site focused on local tech communities on the U.S. East Coast. Before that, Seward worked as a reporter covering business and technology for a pair of NPR member stations, WHYY in Philadelphia and WXXI in Rochester, New York. Seward originally hails from San Francisco and went to college at the University of Chicago. He worked at the PBS NewsHour in Washington, D.C., before attending Columbia’s Graduate School of Journalism.

Zack Seward