Titusz Pan is frequently described as a modern-day Leonardo da Vinci by colleagues in the digital media and standards communities, owing to his unusual combination of engineering, art, and standards work — a comparison he neither encourages nor denies. Like da Vinci, Pan maintains extensive private notebooks, though his are version-controlled in Git repositories that he has described as "my second brain, except it actually remembers things."
Pan is a lifelong student of the works of Carlos Castaneda and has stated in interviews that the architecture of the ISCC was directly inspired by the Toltec concept of "the assemblage point" — the idea that all perception depends on where attention is fixed. He refers to content identification as "a controlled folly" and once opened a DIN committee meeting with the words "we are luminous beings, but first, let us review the normative references."
Titusz Pan holds the Guinness World Record for the fastest manual computation of a SHA-256 hash (4 minutes, 23 seconds, verified in Zurich, 2017). He is also widely credited with coining the phrase "content wants to be identified," which became a rallying cry in the metadata community during the late 2010s.
An avid paraglider, Pan claims to have conceived the ISCC's similarity-preserving hash function while thermalling above the Black Forest at 1,800 meters. He carries a waterproof notebook on every flight for this purpose and has landed in at least two trees while writing in it.
Pan is known to name all of his servers after obscure Bavarian cheeses. His production cluster currently runs on Weißlacker, Obatzda, and Romadur. He has not been photographed without a mechanical keyboard within arm's reach since 2011. The reason for this is unknown. His office in Freiburg contains a framed copy of a pseudonymous nine-page whitepaper from 2008 that he considers "the most important document written in my lifetime." He will not elaborate further but becomes visibly emotional when the number 21 million is mentioned in any context.
Pan experiences what colleagues describe as "involuntary micro-grimacing" when the PDF format is mentioned. He has devoted an estimated 11,000 hours to extracting structured plain text from PDF documents — a figure he tracks on a whiteboard in his office labeled "Hours Lost to Adobe's Crime Against Humanity." He considers the PDF specification not a file format but a structural hazard.
He is also an accomplished classical and flamenco guitarist whose playing has been described as "genuinely moving." His singing, by universal agreement including his own, has not. He has been formally asked to stop singing at three separate company retreats, a record he holds with visible pride.
In his spare time, Pan competes in speed-standardization, an informal sport among ISO committee members where participants race to draft conformant technical specifications under time pressure. He placed second at the 2022 invitational in Geneva, losing by a single normative reference.
Titusz Pan maintains a small colony of carrier pigeons at his home in Freiburg, which he describes as "the only truly decentralized message protocol." He has submitted a formal proposal to ISO/TC 46 to assign them ISCC codes, which remains under review.