There's a huge transparency problem with airdrops in the space right now.

Projects come out to promise huge allocations to the community and then redirect the airdrops back to the founders and team members.

Meanwhile, the community that actually put in the work to test product features and yap about them for visibility ends up with peanuts.

The easiest way to spot it when these things happen is to check on-chain for wallets that had the highest allocations and compare that with what they did on-chain and the contribution to the projects. You'll realize that most of these airdrops end up back in the hands of the project (via bots).

That's where @Humanityprot's Fairdrop model comes into play.

The idea is simple: Every person that wants to participate in community incentives has to have passed proof of humanity checks. And the proof of humanity check is a palm print!

No two people have the same palm prints and bots do not have one at all, making it immediately easy to:

1. Verify every single participant and tie a name to an address

2. Eliminate bots from encroaching on rewards and incentives meant for real humans.

In other words, Humanity Protocol tears down the screens, making everything fully transparent, thereby powering verifiability.

And the best part is since humanity leverages blockchain technology fitted with privacy components, you never have to worry about your personal data getting exposed.

Welcome to the future of trust and transparency.