A new international outdoor campaign by Iris for digital identity platform World turns our collective hatred of captchas into an absurd, eye-catching, and surprisingly insightful brand statement about trust, identity, and proving our humanity in the age of AI.
There’s a particular flavour of digital frustration many of us know all too well: squinting at blurry images, second-guessing whether that corner counts as part of the traffic light, and inevitably clicking “verify” only to be asked to do it all over again. Captchas (those online “prove you’re human” tests) have become a near-universal nuisance, so what happens when you drag them, pixel for pixel, into the real world?
Global creative network Iris has done just that with its latest international campaign for World, a secure, privacy-first identity platform that lets users verify they’re human online without handing over their personal data. Titled Real World Captchas, the outdoor campaign transforms one of the internet’s most outdated rituals into a surprisingly playful street-level experience while pointing toward a better way forward.
Launched across Berlin, Buenos Aires, and Singapore, the installations place larger-than-life replica captchas in front of familiar urban fixtures, such as bicycles, traffic lights, street signs, and fire hydrants, inviting passersby to literally face the absurdity of a system we’ve all come to accept.

“Proving you’re human is becoming increasingly important online, but the ways we do it are increasingly irritating and, even worse, ineffective,” said John Patroulis, chief marketing officer at Tools For Humanity, a contributor to World. “To make people aware of [World ID], we reminded them just how ridiculous the current method actually is.”
Each installation mimics the style of online captchas with uncanny accuracy – including those agonising image tiles that just touch the object in question – eliciting what might best be described as a visceral digital déjà vu. At the base, a scannable QR code leads to World ID, the platform’s anonymous identity solution that allows people to prove they’re unique humans without revealing who they are.
At its core, the campaign is a light-hearted provocation with a serious undertone. Ultimately, in a rapidly evolving internet where bots grow more sophisticated, captchas have lost their edge, slowing down real humans while failing to stop the fakes. World’s mission is to create a more secure digital landscape where proving you’re a person doesn’t require privacy sacrifices or clunky puzzles.

“For years, we’ve tolerated captchas as a necessary evil. This campaign challenges that mindset,” said Menno Kluin, global chief creative officer at Iris Worldwide. “We’ve taken something people are used to ignoring online and dropped it into the real world to make it unmissable.”
The concept, sparked by Iris’ UK and Singapore teams, started with a simplification of the brief. “After that, ideas flowed about proving you are human,” said Menno. “Captchas are so top of mind for many as an annoyance and cause of frustration that this idea emerged fairly quickly.”
In many ways, it’s a classic case of meaning altered by context. Referencing a favourite quote from the late Virgil Abloh (“meaning changes with context”), Menno explained: “Taking an annoying digital thing out of context and placing it in the real world where all of a sudden it delights and captures your attention… this work reflects that.”

Despite the campaign’s technological roots, humour was central to the tone. “It’s true that the client World is a complex tech client. All the more reason to be personal and human. Making the complex, simple, and approachable is our job,” Menno noted. The result is a campaign that manages to be accessible without dumbing down and insightful without becoming abstract.
The idea originated in Iris’ Singapore office, led by Paolo Agulto and his team, which gave the campaign a personal feel from its inception. The additional locations, such as Berlin and Buenos Aires, were handpicked by World to support strategic local growth.
“The other cities were picked by the client as places where they needed a local boost,” said Menno. “We were hoping to spark some curiosity. If people are spending more than 10 seconds with a branded message out there in the real world, it’s a sign that we’ve done a great job.”
There’s a certain poetry to using captchas – a tool designed to filter out bots – as a symbol of humanity. With Real World Captchas, Iris and World not only call out a broken system but offer a clear alternative. World ID doesn’t just promise a smoother user experience; it imagines a future where identity is decentralised, anonymous, and human-first.
In a world where we’re constantly proving our humanity to machines, it’s refreshing to see a campaign that flips the script and maybe even gets us to laugh at the madness of it all. Because really, if we have to keep clicking on squares, they might as well be real.


