Innovation City, a free zone in Ras Al Khaimah focused on artificial intelligence and Web3, has unveiled its first blockchain-based digital business identity system. In a Monday filing shared with Cointelegraph, the city said all companies registered there will receive a cryptographically verifiable sovereign identity issued on the OPN Chain, a public blockchain infrastructure developed by UAE-based IOPn.
This release constitutes an initiative to transform existing business licenses from static documents to dynamic on-chain assets, designed to reduce reliance on central intermediaries and reduce verification uncertainty across the free zone ecosystem.
The move is consistent with the UAE’s broader push to replace traditional registries with blockchain-based identity systems and AI-based workflows, a policy direction proponents say could streamline verification and digital operations for companies operating in the UAE.
Key Takeaways
- Innovation City will issue cryptographically verifiable on-chain business IDs to companies registered through the OPN Chain, which will include over 1,000 companies at launch.
- On-chain identity is used as the primary business registration primitive within the free zone, rather than simply being an optional credential layered onto a traditional registry.
- OPN Chain uses a hybrid data model with a public validator network that processes critical or large datasets off-chain while storing key transaction data and proofs on-chain.
- The project emphasizes security through human-in-the-loop authentication of resulting actions and designs an agent layer with adversarial scenarios as first principles.
- External adoption is still uncertain, with no specific banks, regulators, or exchanges currently appointed as validators or acceptors of these on-chain identities. Questions persist about handling disputes and revoking credentials when third parties are involved.
How On-Chain Business Identity Works
Jimi Ibrahim, co-founder and chief operating officer of IOPn, told Cointelegraph that once its on-chain identity framework is launched, it plans to expand to Innovation City’s customer base of more than 1,000 companies, providing immediate live utility within the free zone’s own digital ecosystem.
He described the core value as not simply issuing digital certificates, but establishing cryptographically verifiable business identities for use for access and verification across Innovation City touchpoints such as business centers and selected ecosystem services, with plans to expand over time to partner providers in technology, marketing and legal services.
OPN Chain is presented as a public network with validator participation open to institutions, infrastructure partners, and governance approval node operators. The system uses a hybrid data model where core transaction data and proofs are kept on-chain and sensitive or large data sets are processed off-chain, balancing transparency and privacy concerns.
Company registration under this framework is described as a basic building block within a free zone rather than an optional overlay on top of existing registries, which distinguishes it from some digital identity schemes, such as the e-residency case in Estonia.
AI Security and Geopolitical Risk
Recent exploits have highlighted how AI agents can be socially engineered to authorize transfers from wallets they control, highlighting the vulnerabilities of autonomous workflows. Ibrahim emphasized that any agent workflow built on these identities requires human oversight of the resulting actions, and that the agent layer was designed from the beginning with adversarial scenarios as a key consideration.
The timing of the launches also intersects with regional tensions and new attacks affecting the UAE. In this broader context, observers note that UAE investors have continued to allocate capital to AI infrastructure, software and cryptocurrency-related assets amid volatility, according to data cited by eToro’s Cointelegraph. Deutsche Bank researchers also argued that conflict could fuel demand for AI rather than derail it.
Regulatory and market background in the Gulf region
The initiative is part of the UAE’s broader policy push to move from traditional registries to blockchain-based identities and AI-enabled workflows. Government and industry observers see potential benefits in streamlined verification, faster onboarding and smoother cross-service operations. However, real adoption will depend on external actors (banks, regulators, service providers) recognizing and validating on-chain credentials.
This context is highlighted by the fact that there is currently no designated external bank or regulator aware of Innovation City’s on-chain identity, leaving questions about interoperability and dispute resolution when third parties become involved. The launch comes as the UAE seeks to attract AI and cryptocurrency investment, a dynamic reflected in investor behavior and market commentary cited by industry observers.
Uncertainty and next steps for external adoption
Key questions remain about how these on-chain identities will be verified by external parties such as banks and regulators, and how disputes or credential revocations will be handled when third parties are involved. While its immediate usefulness is clear within the innovation city’s own digital ecosystem, external integration will determine whether the model can expand beyond free zones and become a broader standard.
As Innovation Cities tests this approach, the next chapter will reveal whether the wider Gulf region and international partners will adopt similar on-chain business identity fundamentals, and how issues of governance, data privacy and cross-border interoperability will be addressed.
Readers should watch to see whether banks and regulators begin to recognize these on-chain identities outside of Innovation Cities and how withdrawals or disputes are handled as adoption expands.
