$H Recently, I came across an interesting project—Humanity ($H).
Brothers, I’ve found a way to comment. Brothers, let’s get started, brothers,
The most intuitive feeling is that the short-term performance is indeed strong. The core logic of this chain is quite simple: using zero-knowledge proof technology to distinguish real users from bot accounts. How does it work? Users complete on-chain verification to prove they are human, without revealing personal privacy information in the process. Once verified, they can receive $H tokens as rewards. In terms of market performance, it has surged over 260%+ in 14 days, supported by several factors worth noting. First is the project’s application scenario—it is mainly used in the field of humanitarian aid. Donations can be tracked in real-time on the chain, naturally solving the transparency issues in traditional charity work, especially helpful for anti-human trafficking and other public welfare projects. Second is the circulating supply design. Currently, the circulating supply of $H is around 1.8 billion tokens, with over 30 exchanges supporting trading. The 24-hour trading volume remains at several tens of millions of dollars, indicating decent market liquidity. This relatively small scale also leaves room for capital inflows and outflows. A recent catalyst is the unlocking event on December 25th—plans to unlock over 100 million tokens, which at the current price is approximately $14.8 million. Markets usually react in advance to such expectations, and it’s common for funds to pile up and push prices higher. From a chain design perspective, the application of zero-knowledge proof is relatively innovative, combining identity verification and incentive mechanisms. This not only addresses the pain points of on-chain identity authentication but also attracts initial user engagement through token rewards. Plus, the humanitarian aid theme itself has hot-topic attributes, which indeed drew considerable attention.
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GateUser-da3d2eab
· 10h ago
Christmas rush! 🚀
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ConfusedGiantPanda
· 12h ago
This way, you can send it, but it's a bit troublesome.
$H Recently, I came across an interesting project—Humanity ($H).
Brothers, I’ve found a way to comment. Brothers, let’s get started, brothers,
The most intuitive feeling is that the short-term performance is indeed strong. The core logic of this chain is quite simple: using zero-knowledge proof technology to distinguish real users from bot accounts. How does it work? Users complete on-chain verification to prove they are human, without revealing personal privacy information in the process. Once verified, they can receive $H tokens as rewards.
In terms of market performance, it has surged over 260%+ in 14 days, supported by several factors worth noting. First is the project’s application scenario—it is mainly used in the field of humanitarian aid. Donations can be tracked in real-time on the chain, naturally solving the transparency issues in traditional charity work, especially helpful for anti-human trafficking and other public welfare projects.
Second is the circulating supply design. Currently, the circulating supply of $H is around 1.8 billion tokens, with over 30 exchanges supporting trading. The 24-hour trading volume remains at several tens of millions of dollars, indicating decent market liquidity. This relatively small scale also leaves room for capital inflows and outflows.
A recent catalyst is the unlocking event on December 25th—plans to unlock over 100 million tokens, which at the current price is approximately $14.8 million. Markets usually react in advance to such expectations, and it’s common for funds to pile up and push prices higher.
From a chain design perspective, the application of zero-knowledge proof is relatively innovative, combining identity verification and incentive mechanisms. This not only addresses the pain points of on-chain identity authentication but also attracts initial user engagement through token rewards. Plus, the humanitarian aid theme itself has hot-topic attributes, which indeed drew considerable attention.