KiKiPa is a user-owned, programmable trust network connecting people, organisations, devices and AI agents — across every country, device, language and vertical.
A person has one identity for parking, another for a hotel key, another for their bank, another just to prove their age. Every vendor stores its own copy of who you are. The result is friction for people, cost for business, and a sprawling landscape of personal data that should never have been duplicated.
AI agents are starting to act on our behalf — booking, paying, verifying, transacting. The old question, “is this user logged in?”, cannot answer the new one: who is acting, on whose behalf, with what permission, and within what limits? As content and agents become infinite, verified human identity becomes the scarce, foundational layer of the internet.
KiKiPa connects identities, credentials, assets and permissions into a single graph: the Blockweb. Rather than asking the world to adopt a new login, KiKiPa makes identity programmable — shared selectively, revocably, and only within the scope a user has granted.
LIVE KYC replaces the one-time identity check with a living trust graph — built from verified credentials, real-world events, payment history and relationships, and updated continuously. Every service reads only the dimensions it needs, and sets its own threshold.
How sure we are the person is who they claim to be.
Recent, active proof the identity is present and real.
Payment and financial behaviour over time.
Reputation that propagates through trusted relationships.
“Our goal is to never know who our users are.”
Zero-knowledge by design. Users hold their own keys and their own data. KiKiPa is the gatekeeper — never the owner.
Your personal data is legally yours, held by you — not copied into vendor databases.
Withdraw access at any time. Entitlements are scoped, time-limited and reversible.
Always see who holds what, why, and for how long.
Filed years before AI agents and programmable permissions became urgent, the portfolio describes user-controlled data, scoped entitlements and trusted intermediated access — the architecture the internet is now reaching for.
The first identity primitive that people — and machines — reach for becomes the trust layer of the internet. KiKiPa is building it.