About Cheqd Airdrop
Cheqd Airdrop is a blockchain network, built in the Cosmos ecosystem, designed to do three core things: to enable people and organizations to have digital, trustworthy interactions directly with each other, whilst maintaining privacy and without any centralized registry or organization needed, to facilitate new business models for decentralized identity and Verifiable Credentials, through the use of token, $CHEQ, to bridge the DeFi ecosystem with the decentralized identity ecosystem, for better user experiences, democratic governance, regulatory compliance and operational efficiency.
Cheqd is airdropping free CHEQ tokens to ATOM, JUNO, OSMO and CHEQ stakers. The snapshot of ATOM, JUNO and OSMO stakers was taken on March 10th, 2022 and the snapshot of CHEQ stakers was taken on March 18th, 2022. Users who staked at least 10 ATOM, 20 JUNO, 20 OSMO or 100 CHEQ by the snapshot date are eligible to claim the airdrop.
Basic | Details |
---|---|
Token Name | Cheqd Airdrop |
Platform | ETH |
Airdrop End | N/A |
Ico Price | 1 LABOUR = $0.08 |
KYC | KYC Is Not requirement |
Whitepaper | Click Here To View |
Max. Participants | Unlimited |
Collect Airdrop | Click Here To Collect Free Airdrop |
How To Join Age Of Cheqd Airdrop
First Step
Visit the cheqd airdrop claim page.
Second step
Connect your keplr wallet.
Third Step
If you were eligible, then you will be able to claim free CHEQ tokens.
Fourth Step
Users who’ve staked at least 10 ATOM, 20 JUNO, 20 OSMO or 100 CHEQ by the snapshot date are eligible to claim the airdrop.
Fifth Step
The snapshot of ATOM, JUNO and OSMO was taken on March 10th, 2022 and the snapshot of CHEQ stakers was taken on March 18th, 2022.
Six Step
Participants need to submit a cheqd wallet address to receive the rewards. For more information regarding this, see this article.
Seven step
For more information regarding the airdrop see this article.
We’re making it easier for individuals and organisations to trust each other!
No more data silos to be leaked or hacked. No more data sold without consent. No more relationships and transactions without trust. We’re building a secure network that enables individuals and organisations to fully control their personal data. It allows self-sovereign identity (SSI) companies to build and deliver secure solutions to you. Through our network, anyone can verify identities quickly and securely.
We give you back privacy and control of your data.
Your data shouldn’t be in silos waiting to be leaked or stolen. Companies shouldn’t make money selling your data without your consent. The network allows SSI companies to build and deliver secure solutions to you.
New business models for verifiable credentials .
They help companies create new and innovative business models, ensuring self-sovereign identity is a viable and rewarding service to offer to customers.
Cheqd Cosmos CLI
There are two command line interface (CLI) tools for interacting with a running cheqd-node
instance:
- cheqd Cosmos CLI: This is intended for node operators. Typically for node configuration, setup, and Cosmos keys.
- Verifiable Data Registry (VDR) Tools CLI: This is intended for carrying out interactions related to decentralised identity / self-sovereign identity (SSI) functionality.
This document is focussed on providing guidance on ow to use the cheqd Cosmos CLI.
Architecture Decision Record (ADR) Process
This is a location to record all high-level architecture decisions for cheqd-node
, the server/node portion of purpose-built network for decentralised identity.
An Architectural Decision (AD) is a software design choice that addresses a functional or non-functional requirement that is architecturally significant.
An Architectural Decision Record (ADR) captures a single AD, such as often done when writing personal notes or meeting minutes; the collection of ADRs created and maintained in a project constitute its decision log.
Rationale
ADRs are intended to be the primary mechanism for proposing new feature designs and new processes, for collecting community input on an issue, and for documenting the design decisions. An ADR should provide:
- Context on the relevant goals and the current state
- Proposed changes to achieve the goals
- Summary of pros and cons
- References
Reporting a Vulnerability
If you think you have discovered a security issue in any of cheqd projects, we’d love to hear from you.We take all security bugs seriously. If confirmed upon investigation, we will patch it within a reasonable amount of time and release a public security bulletin discussing the impact and credit the discoverer.There are two ways to report a security bug:
- Email us at security-github@cheqd.io
- Join cheqd Community Slack and post a message on the #security channel