When a project is preselling, the most troublesome part has never been selling out, but rather how to filter the list.
If you want to reserve the quota for real users, you have to look at interactions, activity, and depth of participation. But once you rely on the public chain to scrape wallets, the problems arise immediately.
To prove that you deserve a whitelist, you are essentially laying out the entire history on the chain for the project party to see.
Which agreements you have participated in, which ecosystems you have followed, how funds have flowed, and what the activity rhythm is like, all can be easily reviewed.
The list has been filtered, and users are pretty much seen through.
@MidnightNetwork is very useful in this process.
What the project party really wants is not a complete wallet profile, but a few verifiable conclusions.
Are you an old user? Has your participation met the standards? Is there any suspicion of account manipulation? Do you meet the conditions to get the quota?
As long as the system verifies these results clearly, it is enough; there is no need to drag out the entire underlying trajectory.
By doing this, the whitelist can still be filtered, and presales can still be conducted, but users will not give away their entire on-chain path just to obtain a qualification.
This kind of scenario is not one-time only.
The list will be updated, quotas will be adjusted, and qualifications will be re-evaluated.
$NIGHT placed at the capital level, DUST is responsible for transactions and contract execution. When running such high-frequency verifications, it is easier for the project party to control costs, and the process is more stable.
If we really want more ordinary people to dare to engage in on-chain presales, cleaning up this step is more important than shouting any slogans.
@MidnightNetwork $NIGHT #night
If you want to reserve the quota for real users, you have to look at interactions, activity, and depth of participation. But once you rely on the public chain to scrape wallets, the problems arise immediately.
To prove that you deserve a whitelist, you are essentially laying out the entire history on the chain for the project party to see.
Which agreements you have participated in, which ecosystems you have followed, how funds have flowed, and what the activity rhythm is like, all can be easily reviewed.
The list has been filtered, and users are pretty much seen through.
@MidnightNetwork is very useful in this process.
What the project party really wants is not a complete wallet profile, but a few verifiable conclusions.
Are you an old user? Has your participation met the standards? Is there any suspicion of account manipulation? Do you meet the conditions to get the quota?
As long as the system verifies these results clearly, it is enough; there is no need to drag out the entire underlying trajectory.
By doing this, the whitelist can still be filtered, and presales can still be conducted, but users will not give away their entire on-chain path just to obtain a qualification.
This kind of scenario is not one-time only.
The list will be updated, quotas will be adjusted, and qualifications will be re-evaluated.
$NIGHT placed at the capital level, DUST is responsible for transactions and contract execution. When running such high-frequency verifications, it is easier for the project party to control costs, and the process is more stable.
If we really want more ordinary people to dare to engage in on-chain presales, cleaning up this step is more important than shouting any slogans.
@MidnightNetwork $NIGHT #night