Kaito founder: Airdrop uses AI to screen long-term identification, and South Korea's currency holding rate is 50% higher.
On March 24th, Yu Hu, founder of Kaito AI, posted on the X platform that this round of Kaito airdrops took an unprecedented approach, not asking users to perform specific tasks for Kaito, but using AI as a neutral evaluator for the first time on a large scale to identify users who have long agreed with Kaito's value. The data shows that accounts with high weighted scores have a higher proportion of coins and pledges by about 20%. The three key indicators are long-term awareness of Kaito, value recognition and ecological participation (including Kaito Pro and Yaps). At the regional level, the currency holding rate of Korean users is 50% higher than the average. Yu Hu said that although the method is not perfect, it effectively protects the network and motivates long-term supporters.