Airdrop Inquiry

Over Protocol open airdrop inquiry, airdrop distribution will take place after the mainnet launch

ChainCatcher news, the L1 blockchain lightweight node protocol Over Protocol has announced the airdrop allocation details and opened airdrop inquiries, which will be distributed after the mainnet launch (expected between the end of this year and the beginning of next year). Over Protocol has allocated 15% of the total token supply to the community access program (OCAP), of which 54.5 million OVER tokens (5.45%) are specifically for the airdrop program, while the remaining tokens will be used to support marketing, liquidity provision, grant programs, and ecosystem funds. The airdrop amount is determined based on the scores from OverWallet tasks and testnet participation. Currently, users can check their airdrop allocation in the Airdrop Checker within the OverFlex application (currently OverWallet).Among them, 30 million tokens (3% of the total supply) are distributed to OverWallet users, with 418,215 effective participants; 10 million tokens are distributed to OverNode users, with 52,607 effective participants; 10 million tokens are allocated to Nethers NFT holders (3,945 people); 3 million tokens are distributed to participants of OKX Cryptopedia Season 16 (469,869 people); and 1 million tokens are distributed to participants who completed the Sybil detection task on HashKey Global.Over Protocol states that the airdrop program is based on three key criteria: honesty, diligence, and scores, and verifies honesty through two rounds of Sybil detection to prevent multiple accounts and bots. "Diligent contributors" who cannot be fully assessed through Sybil detection can obtain additional verification opportunities via a Google form.

Slow Fog: The eligibility for the Connext airdrop is verified through a Merkle proof, and users who are not eligible cannot bypass the verification to claim someone else's airdrop

ChainCatcher message, according to SlowMist intelligence, some accounts' NEXT tokens have been claimed to unintended addresses. The SlowMist security team followed up with an analysis and shared a brief summary as follows:Users can claim NEXT tokens through the claimBySignature function of the NEXT Distributor contract. There are two roles involved: the recipient role, which is used to receive the claimed NEXT tokens, and the beneficiary role, which is the address eligible to receive NEXT tokens, determined when the Connext protocol announced the airdrop eligibility.When a user claims NEXT tokens, the contract performs two checks: first, it checks the signature of the beneficiary role; second, it checks whether the beneficiary role is eligible to receive the airdrop. During the first check, it verifies whether the recipient provided by the user is signed by the beneficiary role, so arbitrarily providing a recipient address without the beneficiary's signature cannot pass the check.If a beneficiary address is specified to construct a signature, it may pass the signature check, but it will not pass the second check for airdrop eligibility. The airdrop eligibility check is performed through a Merkle proof, which should be generated by the official Connext protocol. Therefore, users who are not eligible to receive the airdrop cannot bypass the check to claim someone else's airdrop.
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