An Update on the Progress of our Self-Claim Airdrop dApp

in #charity7 years ago

Currently conducting our closed beta test

If you have had the time to have a read of the official Eurno whitepaper you will more than likely be aware of the fact that we intend to release our token for free, through a custom-coded self-claim dApp on the Ethereum blockchain. As is mentioned on our roadmap, we aim to release the dApp by the end of this quarter and set out to complete our closed beta testing before we release the app to the public.

Since we released the official Eurno website and whitepaper we have been working tirelessly around the clock to ensure we not only meet our deadlines, but manage to beat the timeframe in which we set out to complete them.

With that in mind I am proud to announce to the world that we are currently conducting the closed beta test of our Eurno self-claim dApp. To conduct the beta test myself and SoSoLean have hand selected 9 other participants with varying levels of experience in the crypto-space, and handed them with a testing plan which denotes all the tests which they need to complete.

For completing the closed beta test on behalf of Eurno each participant (excluding myself and SoSoLean) will be rewarded with 1000 ENO tokens. We have decided on such a generous bounty due to the importance of the tests.

When the testing is completed (I am personally pushing our testers to try and complete this by the end of this weekend) I will publish the results (and test plans) on our official website to allow the public to assess the results.

As the self-claim dApp is meant to serve somewhat as an identification tool, the main purpose of the closed beta test is to see how easily our beta testers can cheat the system and discover any security flaws. Should they discover any flaws they will be addressed and retested.

Smart contract audit

Although the Eurno project is a freely distributed one, which aims to complete charitable ventures, I still decided, at the conception of the idea, that I would like to get the smart contract, which is used, audited before it is deployed.

Due to the obvious pricing issues which are presented by going to one of the 'big boys' (some companies charge in excess of $40k) it was decided that a self audit, such as that provided by Quantstamp, should be sufficient enough to ensure that a basic level of security has been achieved for the contract.

Due to their system having a bug (which is fair enough, they are in their beta stage) I have not been able to complete a QSP audit as of yet, but have managed to get the Eurno smart contract audited by Smart Check's self audit system (available here: https://tool.smartdec.net/) and, other than a false positive, I am happy to announce that the Eurno project smart contract has revealed no vulnerabilities and is ready for deployment (after beta-testing).

Although I am more than happy with the results of the self audit by Smart Check, I would still like to get a QSP report to stick up on the homepage and allow the public to read it - Smart Check do not offer a report as such - so I will keep on pursuing an audit from QSP to add to that of Smart Check.

As always, I will keep you all updated with our progress through the official Eurno blog and social media channels below.

Happiness.

Social Media


Twitter: https://twitter.com/Eurno
Steemit: https://steemit.com/@eurno
Medium: https://medium.com/@eurno/
Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/Eurno/
Telegram Chat: https://t.me/joinchat/G8zTvxHtkTxCx4JA-4CHvg
Telegram Announcements: https://t.me/EurnoAnn