Blum's Anti-Cheat Measures: Ensuring Fairness

As a Blum user, you may be eager to accumulate points through tasks, games, and referrals as the launch approaches. However, many users risk being automatically banned, losing all their accumulated points.

Some users have amassed over 20 million Blum points, hoping for a listing price around $0.0563 or $0.04. But remember, these are Blum points, not tokens, and they will be converted at a future rate. Accumulating points doesn’t guarantee rewards.

Blum, like many other airdrops, uses Telegram. When you launch the app, you are informed that your IP address and device ID (MAC address) will be recorded. Some users attempt to bypass this by creating multiple profiles on Telegram using the same IP and MAC address. However, Blum's anti-cheat system will detect and ban these accounts.

The system may be lenient with shared IPs, as they can result from public network usage, but it strictly penalizes shared device IDs, which indicate intentional cheating.

Some users attempt to avoid detection by using remote machines or anti-detect browsers, but Blum’s advanced anti-fraud system—similar to banking security—will catch these tactics. Telegram's enhanced detection systems also prevent the use of fake numbers, making cheating more challenging.

Blum is conducting KYC (Know Your Customer) checks quietly, which will catch many users off guard. Anyone using dishonest methods will lose their points, and referral networks will be banned.

My advice: play it smart. Avoid attempting to cheat, or you may end up frustrated. Blum is committed to upholding integrity, and cheating will not be tolerated.

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