Proof, not data

Your ID, proven — never exposed.

It confirms who you are and what you're entitled to — without revealing your name, birthdate, ID number, or address.

Show a status, not a document — eligibility as a checkmark, proven cryptographically.
Nothing to photograph — the code rotates every 30 seconds, screenshot-proof.
Bound to your device — post-quantum sealed, and FIDNT keeps no copy.
fID On this device
MS
Maria S.@maria · did:fidnt:7f3a…c92
Verified — without revealing the data
Identity Age 18+ PH resident Senior eligible
Private — stays on your phone
Full nameM•••• S••••
Birthdate•• ••• ••••
ID number•••• ••• 4821
Address•••••••••••
Present to verify One-time · screenshot-proof ↻ rotates in 30s
Sealed post-quantum · NIST FIPS 204 · ISP 403 · FIDNT keeps no copy
The whole point

The verifier gets an answer. Not your life.

When you present your fID, the other side learns only what they need — confirmed, signed, and true. Everything else never leaves your device.

What a verifier sees

  • "Identity confirmed" — a signed yes
  • "Eligible for this privilege" — yes / no
  • A proof they verify against the public key
  • A one-time code that can't be reused

What never leaves your phone

  • Your full name
  • Your birthdate
  • Your ID number
  • Your address and photo

This is the method the NPC's draft Circular on the availment of privileges (Ref. PDD-26-00136) is built to encourage — verify eligibility without copying the ID. See how →

How it works

Three taps, zero exposure

1 · Show your fID

Open your wallet and present the rotating code — on your screen, never handed over.

2 · They scan it

The verifier scans the one-time code and asks one question — "is this person eligible?"

3 · They get a signed yes

A post-quantum signed proof returns the answer. No document copied, nothing stored. Admissible under RA 8792 §7.