Terence Kwok is the founder of the decentralized identity project Humanity Protocol and the former founder and CEO of the hospitality technology unicorn Tink Labs [1] [2]. His career is noted for the rapid scaling of his first major venture and a subsequent re-emergence in the Web3 space with a focus on privacy-preserving, biometric-based digital identity [3].
Kwok attended the University of Chicago, where he studied Economics. He reportedly left his studies before graduating to concentrate on building his first company, Tink Labs, which he founded at the age of 19 [1].
In 2012, Kwok founded Tink Labs, a technology company aimed at the hospitality industry [1] [3]. The company's flagship product was "handy," a smartphone provided to hotel guests for complimentary use during their stay. The device offered free internet access, local and international calls, and curated city guides, with hotels paying a subscription fee for the service, which served as a basis for later work with blockchain technology [1].
Tink Labs experienced significant growth, deploying its devices in over 600,000 hotel rooms across 82 countries and reporting a user base of 12 million customers at its peak [1] [2]. The company attracted substantial venture capital, raising over 1 billion, making it one of Hong Kong's first startups to achieve this milestone [3].
Despite its rapid expansion, Tink Labs faced operational and financial difficulties. Reports cited high operational costs, an unsustainable business model, and an inability to secure further funding as key challenges [1]. In mid-2019, the company began to cease its global operations and conducted mass layoffs [2]. The company officially entered liquidation proceedings in January 2020 [2] [3].
After a period away from the public eye, Kwok re-emerged in the Web3 sector with the launch of Humanity Protocol. The project, developed by the Human Institute in collaboration with Animoca Brands and Polygon Labs, was publicly announced when it emerged from stealth on February 20, 2024 [4] [5]. As Founder and CEO, Kwok leads the development of a decentralized identity solution designed to address issues of Sybil attacks, online fraud, and data sovereignty in the digital age [6] [7].
Kwok has stated that the mission is to build a "human layer for Web3" by establishing a secure and private method for users to prove their unique identity online [5]. He has contrasted the decentralized approach of Humanity Protocol with the centralized models of Web2, drawing on his experiences at Tink Labs to emphasize the importance of user-owned data and identity [1]. In public discussions, Kwok has articulated the project's goal of creating a more equitable and human-centric internet. During a Twitter Spaces event, he stated, “With deepfakes on the rise, Humanity Protocol focuses on creating an unspoofable way to verify human presence without sacrificing user privacy” [8].
Humanity Protocol is a decentralized identity project that aims to provide a Sybil-resistant identity verification layer for Web3 applications. The project's core objective is to allow users to verify that they are a unique human without revealing sensitive personal information [4].
The protocol is built on a technological stack that combines biometrics, zero-knowledge cryptography, and a Layer 2 blockchain solution [1].
The protocol is designed to support various use cases, including fair airdrop distributions ("fairdrops"), one-person-one-vote governance systems in DAOs, decentralized social media, and enterprise solutions for fraud prevention [7] [4].
In February 2024, Humanity Protocol announced it had raised 1 billion valuation, achieving unicorn status at its public launch [1] [9]. The round was led by Kingsway Capital and Animoca Brands. Other participating investors included Polygon Ventures, Mechanism Capital, Shima Capital, Hashed, CMCC Global, and Blockchain.com [1] [3].
The project maintains strategic partnerships with its key backers. Its collaboration with Polygon Labs is foundational to its technical architecture, as it is built using the Polygon CDK. The partnership with Animoca Brands is focused on ecosystem growth and integrating the identity solution into Web3 gaming and metaverse projects to combat bots [4] [3]. The protocol's leadership includes a foundation with directors Yat Siu of Animoca Brands and investor Mario Nawfal [10].
Humanity Protocol launched publicly in February 2024, with its testnet scheduled for the second quarter of 2024 [4] [1]. The testnet saw rapid adoption, reportedly onboarding one million users within its first 52 days [8]. By mid-2025, the project was in an invite-only phase for its dashboard, with plans announced for a full public launch and an iOS application [11]. The protocol has a native token, $H, with plans for a "fairdrop" model for its initial distribution [11].
Kwok is an active public speaker and writer, discussing topics related to digital identity, Web3, and the impact of artificial intelligence.
He has spoken at numerous global technology and blockchain conferences. His appearances include:
Kwok contributes to several technology and business publications as part of the Entrepreneur Leadership Network®. His writings advocate for decentralized security models and a re-evaluation of how companies handle user data.
Kwok has been featured in various crypto and technology media outlets. He was interviewed by The Defiant in October 2024 and by Pulse 2.0 in August 2024, where he detailed the vision and technology behind Humanity Protocol [7] [6]. He also participated in a widely followed Twitter Spaces event with industry figures Sandeep Nailwal of Polygon and Yat Siu of Animoca Brands to discuss the protocol's rapid growth and technological advantages [8].
In 2016, Kwok was named to the Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia list for his work with Tink Labs [3].