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Looks like that hyped airdrop is just around the corner, maybe dropping in May.
They have come up with a PARCL-way to eliminate sybil attacks effectively:
If you are a sybil, you have two choices:
Disclose sybil addresses for 15% of your intended allocation. No questions will be asked. The deadline for this action is May 17th.
Decline to disclose and receive no rewards if an address is flagged by our internal sybil report or by bounty hunters.
But wait, what's even crazier is how they handle sybil activity:
If you're a single entity using multiple addresses for industrial farming.
If you've created a "valueless" NFT just to transfer it between different blockchains.
If you've engaged in popular "sybil farming" apps like Merkly, L2Pass, L2Marathon, etc.
If you've been moving $0.01 back and forth across chains just to interact with them.
If you suspect you might be a sybil, chances are you are one.
So, we've got a bunch to figure out, right? Like, how many times do I gotta use sybil farming applications before it starts giving me the side-eye, thinking I'm up to no good? And then, what's the deal, should I be the one to flag it? Plus, what's their game plan for catching the sybils? Big question is, can we even trust our mates with our wallet addresses, knowing they could snitch for a slice of the pie?
Regarding sybil farming applications, @PrimordialAA mentioned:
"If you're a real user who tested sybil farming applications or used it for a gas drop, you're probably not a sybil.
But if you've only used sybil farming applications and the rest to send NFTs in a circle, you are probably a sybil."
Stoked to see what goes down. wild times, huh?
Looks like that hyped airdrop is just around the corner, maybe dropping in May.
They have come up with a PARCL-way to eliminate sybil attacks effectively:
If you are a sybil, you have two choices:
Disclose sybil addresses for 15% of your intended allocation. No questions will be asked. The deadline for this action is May 17th.
Decline to disclose and receive no rewards if an address is flagged by our internal sybil report or by bounty hunters.
But wait, what's even crazier is how they handle sybil activity:
If you're a single entity using multiple addresses for industrial farming.
If you've created a "valueless" NFT just to transfer it between different blockchains.
If you've engaged in popular "sybil farming" apps like Merkly, L2Pass, L2Marathon, etc.
If you've been moving $0.01 back and forth across chains just to interact with them.
If you suspect you might be a sybil, chances are you are one.
So, we've got a bunch to figure out, right? Like, how many times do I gotta use sybil farming applications before it starts giving me the side-eye, thinking I'm up to no good? And then, what's the deal, should I be the one to flag it? Plus, what's their game plan for catching the sybils? Big question is, can we even trust our mates with our wallet addresses, knowing they could snitch for a slice of the pie?
Regarding sybil farming applications, @PrimordialAA mentioned:
"If you're a real user who tested sybil farming applications or used it for a gas drop, you're probably not a sybil.
But if you've only used sybil farming applications and the rest to send NFTs in a circle, you are probably a sybil."
Stoked to see what goes down. wild times, huh?
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