After 4 years of waiting, ZKsync finally opened the airdrop eligibility testing portal, but the results disappointed many long-awaited users. The point of contention is the project's interpretation of airdrop eligibility and profits from internal trading. Many people met the requirements but didn't get the airdrop they deserved, while some obscure addresses made a lot of money. Many ecological projects have even formed alliances to protest this airdrop allocation. ZKsync officials have also launched a Q&A session in response to this controversy, but the effectiveness depends on the community's response. Below is the full text of the Q&A session.

1. How to qualify for this airdrop?

There are two ways for an address to qualify for the 17.5% airdrop:

1. Users (89%): ZKsync users transfer crypto assets to ZKsync Era and meet at least one of the seven eligibility criteria.

2. Contributors (11%): Individuals, developers, researchers, communities and companies contributing to the ZKsync protocol and ecosystem through development, advocacy, education or participation, regardless of whether they use the ZKsync network or not.

Activity on ZKsync Era is optional for wallets in the 11% Contributor category. Contributor Allocation is primarily aimed at people and communities who have built original projects on ZKsync, contributed to related GitHub repositories, performed security research, served as Discord moderators, or Join communities like Degen, Bonsai, Crypto the Game, Pudgy and Milady.#binance $BTC