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Global tech firm Identy.io targets Kenya and Nigeria with a mobile-first biometric solution designed to slash hardware costs and bridge Africa’s digital identity gap.

In a strategic maneuver set to redefine Africa’s digital identity landscape, global biometric powerhouse Identy.io has officially launched its expansion into Kenya and Nigeria.
This is not merely a corporate expansion; it is a calculated bet on the continent’s digital future. By targeting the two largest economies in East and West Africa, Identy.io is positioning itself as the critical infrastructure layer for the next decade of African economic development. The move comes at a pivotal moment when governments are scrambling to close the "identity gap" that leaves millions invisible to the financial system.
For years, the adoption of biometric systems in Africa has been hamstrung by the prohibitive cost of specialized hardware. Identy.io’s entry signals a paradigm shift. Their "software-first" approach leverages the one device that is already ubiquitous across the continent: the smartphone. By enabling high-fidelity biometric capture on standard mobile devices, they are effectively democratizing identity verification, removing the need for expensive scanners that have historically slowed down national rollout programs.
Antony Vendhan, the firm’s co-founder, was explicit about the mission: "We are transforming the traditional industry model, which often relies on expensive and inflexible digital infrastructure." This flexibility is key for markets like Kenya, where the digital ecosystem is mature but often fragmented. [...](asc_slot://start-slot-5)The firm’s technology allows for the issuance of digital identities to individuals who lack formal documentation, directly addressing the World Bank’s statistic that 80% of adults in Sub-Saharan Africa have only basic or no identification.
As Kenya and Nigeria double down on their digital public infrastructure, the arrival of a player like Identy.io accelerates the competition. The firm is not just selling software; it is selling the keys to efficient governance. From distributing social welfare to securing elections, the applications of their mobile-first biometrics are vast.
However, this expansion also brings the critical conversation of data privacy to the forefront. As foreign firms embed themselves into the foundational ID layers of African nations, the scrutiny on data sovereignty and security will inevitably intensify. For now, Identy.io is promising a future where your face is your password, and your phone is your ID card—a future that is arriving faster than many policymakers anticipated.
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