Aspace x Satoshi Club AMA Recap from 21st of July

Aspace x Satoshi Club AMA Recap from 21st of July

Hello, Satoshi clubbers! Another AMA took place in Satoshi Club and we would like to introduce to you the AMA session with our friends from Aspace and our guests was @AndroSamaniego and @dimisfou – representatives of Aspace. The AMA took place on 21st of July.

The total reward pool was 500$ and has been split into 3 parts.

In this AMA Recap, we will try to summarise the most interesting points for you.

Part 1 — introduction and questions from the Website

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Hello, dear Satoshi Club community! We are pleased to announce AMA with Aspace.

Today our guests are @AndroSamaniego @dimisfou!

Dimitris S.:
Happy to be here guys 🙂

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
Welcome to Satoshi Club @dimisfou @AndroSamaniego

Andro | Aspace:
Hello everyone! 🙂

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Hello and welcome to Satoshi Club, guys!😊

How are you doing? 😊

Dimitris S.:
Thank you for having us, we appreciate you giving us the opportunity to be here not anonymously, to present our project on a successful channel like yours.

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
We are glad to have you here

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
We are honored to have you here today😍

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Let’s start!
Introduce yourself, please. How did you get to be involved in crypto & Aspace?
Tell us please about your position in Aspace?

Andro | Aspace:
A little intro into us (the Aspace devs)

@dimisfou : he is the tech master! He has years of experience in blockchain dev

Myself: I have extensive marketing experience primarily through dropshipping. I also have extensive trading experience in the stock and crypto markets where thankfully I have been doing well

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
Great background into technology fields😃

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Great background guys👍

Dimitris S.:
I’m Dimitris Sfounis, lead software engineer at Bluechain Europe, have been a solidity software engineer for the past 5 years and the smart contracts expert on the DLT4ALL programme of the European Commission.

We met with Andro on a prototype project some months ago, and we joined forces to create his dream: Aspace, a provably fair Decentralized Social Network, implementing Web 3.0

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
What is the essence of Aspace? How long does it take to develop a project? What plans do you have for the future? And what can we expect from Aspace?

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
In a nutshell, what is Aspace?

Dimitris S.:
Oh boy, that’s a good question. Please allow us some time to type 🙂

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Web3 is definitely the topic of the next bull run😉

Andro | Aspace:
Imagine Facebook & Youtube having a crypto baby. We want to provide the same fun experience for users but we simply want to make it open-sourced & have the users benefit from using the platform as well

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Take your time, please.

Dimitris S.:
The benefit of a Decentralized Social Network just like the one we’re building in Aspace is to bring the benefits of Web 3.0 to the public. We’re aiming for transparency, fairness, unlocked value streams and decentralization through a truly Democratically Governed project that exists beyond Andro and Dimitri, to be truly self-governed.

We think there’s a limit in what the Social networks of today can do. I think it’s time to move the game forward, and have fairness and User Sovereignty be the center of it all 🙂

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
It sounds amazing🤔

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Indeed ☺️

Dimitris S.:
If we’re talking value, Aspace will be the first Social network to reward ad-revenue to its users, without being an intermediary.
Will also implement a gaming-oriented marketplace (Aspace Gaming) and a Democratic Governance platform for bounties & voting. Simple answers like that can also help clear the air 😀

Andro | Aspace:
This is also my belief according to my market research! I was surprised that there werent any projects trying to decentralize social media. I strongly believe thats where we are heading eventually.

After this realization, I spent 26 hours straight typing up the whitepaper & double & triple making sure that I had a solid idea to get started

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Also we would like to know about your team. Who is on the project team core?

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
How did you choose the name of the project?

Andro | Aspace:
Currently, it is myself, Dimitri, and Mike.

Our team gains strength from its interdisciplinarity. We have a development lead that has years of experience in “formal” solidity research and programming, and a project lead that has tons of experience in blockchain markets and how things generally work here.

Additionally, we’re putting together a dedicated team with a good balance between back-end devs (required for building our tech), front-end devs (required for presenting our tech in an intuitive way to our users) and marketing people that will help us keep our product successful and promoted well. Lastly, one important part of our team is our Community Managers, making sure we always, ALWAYS stay in touch with our users and their feedback. Aspace is a community project, first and foremost. We thrive through the constant friction with our people.

Dimitris S.:
@Andres “How did you choose the name of the project”

This is a good one. We wanted a name that conveys what our network is about. It’s youthful, aims at technologically-knowledgable people, it’s cyberpunky. But no matter how tech innovative it is, it still has to remain useful enough to the people, from any backround.

So it’s a digital space on the internet on which to be part of a community fairly.

Just a space. On the internet. Aspace.

This goes to you.

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
Got it, I think is the correct name following correctly that you want to share with the users👏

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Thanks for the introduction, we will have a question selected for the Part 1. Ready to start?

Dimitris S.:
Absolutely!

Q1 from Telegram User @andrey_seleznov
Hi Aspace!
As we are all too aware, most traditional social platforms suffer from few abusive, rude or even bullying users who do not adhere to social norms and devolve conversations into fights or just make threads unpleasant for regular participants. This may cause some people to leave the social platform or adversely affect their mental state.
Since Aspace is a distributed platform, I do not think censorship is possible like on the centralIzed social media. Is it even possible to have decentralized moderators? 🙂 I’d like to ask if you have plans on how to resolve this problem in the future, will there be tools that allow users to collectively decide and mute or ban toxic users?
Thank you!

Dimitris S.:
Actually a great question, I mean it. Censorship is a big subject.

Well in Aspace we integrate the Web 3.0 architecture. Web 3.0 mostly means building decentralized systems, systems that are fair by default, as there’s no central authority. Through that, we can guarantee Data Sovereignty to our users, since at no point do they yield those data to us. This also ensures fairness, since at no point are we free to do whatever we wish on a project like Aspace, that will implement Democratic Governance through our platform.

Linked to that, censorship is a bit of a more sensitive subject because we need some sort of control in order to maintain a healthy Social network, one that is not tainted by extremist views and always friendly to its community. For this, we start with the simple Christian saying, “love thy neighbor”. Our first implemented content controls will be the prohibition of all content designed to harm, harass or cause grief to a person or community. The community, once the Democratic Governance platform is built and put online, can vote on and tune up/down these controls. Anything else, in the spirit of true and honest, uncensored argumentation can live and thrive on Aspace.

So in short: Aspace is built to have user-governed content controls. We trust our community enough to guarantee that the wellbeing of the many will constantly yield good solutions to this problem.

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Great answer👍

Ready for the next question? Or want to add something😊

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
Clear and detailed answer😁

Dimitris S.:
We continue! 😀

Q2 from Telegram User @Highpee
ASPACE will be piloted by the team but you plan to evolve into a self-developing and community governed project. You said once a proposal reach a certain level of positive feedback of voting, 90% of coin will be sent back to developer who initiated the proposal while your reserve will eat up 10% of coins deposited from voting but in a case of negative feedback, 95% of voting deposits will be returned to voters while your reserve will hold and keep the remaining 5%. Why should users deposit asset before they can initiate proposals and vote? Why will your platform reserve take voting deposit whether a proposal is successfully or not and what is the reserve used for? Also, Why do is deposited coin retuned only to proposal initiator when a proposal is successful and voters get nothing but when it fails, proposal initiators gets nothing while voters gets 95% of voters deposit is returned to them? How effective is this type of governance?

Dimitris S.:
We try to keep certain small percentages in the process as “friction”, to avoid people overusing the Governance Platform for non-trivial decisions.
To offset those frictions, we plan on having an Aspace Grants program that will fund big protocol voting rounds, the important ones, so that user funds won’t really be affected.

Moreover, we try to implement positive rewards measures and not negative rewards for User Activity, so all these percentages are subject to change (and even through the Aspace Democratic Governance platform 😉).

In general, because we push most of the advertisement revenue to the users and content creators (we don’t profit) having some sort of minor income mechanic from Aspace Improvement Proposals (AUPs) helps us maintain the platform too. It’s all about balance, and things can change rapidly in this prototype stage that we’re currently in.

I loved your question and if you have more suggestions, whoever you are, please discuss with us on our channel!

Andro | Aspace:
This is a good question! Being that we dont plan to profit form advertisers as most centralized networks currently do, we need to have revenue streams that allow us to pay for essential staff such as customer service reps & etc

To avoid any subpar quality proposals, we to plan to route some of the tokens to our reserve as previously mentioned

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
Of course, please provide us the link to join

Dimitris S.:
Absolutely.
Telegram: https://t.me/AspaceApp

Website: https://aspace.app

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Great strategy😊

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
Thank you, btw who are your current partnerships and which benefits they bring you?

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Join, Satoshi Clubbers!🚀

Andro | Aspace:
Currently, we are looking to partner with more people but as of now, we have scheduled promotions with some Youtubers, Tiktokers, and other influencers. We actually have our first influencer announcement happening tonight!

Also, we are in close contact with the Unicrypt team to ensure everything is running smoothly during the ILO

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
Congratulations for it, we will be expecting for the announcement, don’t forget to share it with our community

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Looking forward to the news! 😉

Can we proceed? Or you want to add something?

Dimitris S.:
Andro’s adding something 🙂

Andro | Aspace:
We plan to use our influencer friends to gain more awareness with their gaming contacts. As our plan to integrate more content creators onto the Aspace platform, we are hosting gaming tournaments and other fun community engaging activities alike

Stay tuned for the reveal, I dont think the influencers will disappoint 🚀🚀🚀

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
🥳 exciting news are coming, we can’t wait

Let’s proceed with the next question!

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
🚀

Q3 from Telegram User @Rakshitx5
One of the biggest problems on social media is Hate comments. People abuse each other, give threats, do racism and many other hateful things. So what is the Aspace policy against hate comments? How do you stop them? If someone does will you ban him/her from your platform?

Dimitris S.:
Yeah, content control means deleting content such as this and blacklisting the User Identity + Address. Content controls themselves can be updated and extended by Users of our platform
I think we covered this in the answer above

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
That’s a great plan, hate and cyberbullying shouldn’t be allowed, btw do you have similar rules against spammers and bots?

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Do your users need to pass KYC btw?

Andro | Aspace:
Yes, our rules also go against spammers and bots 🙂

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
Perfect👏

Dimitris S.:
That’s the thing about Self Sovereign Identity on the blockchain, which Aspace will be implementing: Users don’t need KYC 😊

But: We have trust scores. User Identities have a certain trust score, which is flowed into them by different Identity Providers in the system, or even Individual Users.
So for participating in the higher and more important parts of Aspace, like protocol governance or development, you need a high trust score. For lesser things, a lesser score.
Or maybe a trust score in-flow from a big orgnaization that is doxxed on Aspace gives a user +1000 trust score. You can share your ID info with that provider (Like BlockPass or whatever other service) and us in the Aspace Dev Team or anywhere else don’t know about it, ever.

This is what we’re trying to achieve through Self Sovereign Identity. It’s the latest, bleeding edge in blockchain research and we’re making it a reality!

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
You thought out this nuance perfectly! 👌

Thank you very much for your answers! ready for the next question😉

Dimitris S.:
By the way if you want to check it out in research, this is the CALYPSO Decentralized Identity system as proposed in research papers by the W3C and the Cryptology archive

Yeah, ready for the next right Andro bro?

Andro | Aspace:
Yes sir, let’s go!

Q4 from Telegram User @DK177
You have identified some of your competitors, namely, BitClout, D.tube, steemit, Basic Attention token and Twetch. Do you differ from them only because of decentralization and introducing of Web 3.0? In addition to that, are there any unique features of Aspace? What are the strengths of your project? Did you identify any weaknesses of the competitors? In ten years’ time, where do you see yourself in comparison with BitClout, D.tube, steemit, Basic Attention token and Twetch?

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Thanks for sharing😊

Dimitris S.:
What’s with all the great questions goddamn. Thank you for picking those!

Andro | Aspace:
Because of our previous experience and research (academic & practical) on the subject of Decentralized Online Communities, the first thing we’re offering to build that sets us apart from competition is Self-Sovereign Identity, as per the Web 3.0 specification. We want User data to remain with the users, and not have to go through a central trust provider (not even us, Aspace’s dev team). So first things first, we’re focusing hard on Self Sovereign Identity.

Second of all, the second most important focus in our development plan is Data Interoperability – the ability for a user’s data on the network to be reused and analyzed endlessly, used in other platforms maybe, always through User Consent. This ensures our digital platform is useful for external services: Useful for advertisers, putting money in the platform to target Aspace’s youthful and techy audience. Useful for online merchants and identity services, utilizing Aspace’s Decentralized Identity standard to let users log on with their Aspace credentials. Possibilities here are endless, and usefulness, let’s be real, maintains value in a system.

Finally, our third focus is Fairness. It’s not only about redistributing advertisement money to our users fairly. It’s about building a true community-built and community-maintained project, an Aspace Network that although created by us at first, doesn’t need Andro and Dimitri and Mike and the rest of the development team to keep existing and be profitable. This is for us the true meaning of Decentralization.

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
It seems you have strong fundamentals but, what is coming for Aspace? Could you share us your roadmap?

Andro | Aspace:
Here’s the roadmap from our website🔥

www.aspace.app

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
By the way how do you manage to solve the basic problems of defi: security, compatibility and scalability?

Dimitris S.:
A simple version of the roadmap is also available on the website.

For Aspace’s technology roadmap: Prototype Alpha coming in the first 3 months (Q4 2021), with more prototypes Beta and Gamma being delivered by Q2 2022 leading up to our Minimum Viable Product: A fully fledged, working, blockchain based social network. We’re migrating a version of Aspace to Ethereum after EIP1559 also 🙂

For a marketing roadmap: YouTube and Tiktok and Instagram promotions as deliverables for the following months to keep our market healthy and engagement high, to keep bringing in new people and build a strong Community on which to base Aspace.
Andro himself with his people in the Marketing Team have great ideas coming up to keep engagement high and people hyped up for Aspace, while giving my dev team time to build!

Security: Assymetric cryptography and safely warehoused data, as solved by IPFS and Ethereum’s Swarm
Compatability: Never had a problem there, smart contract data are readily available and compatible, but we’re using World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) Open Specifications at EVERYTHING to maximise compatability
Scalability: We start from BSC to keep costs low, migrating to ETH after EIP1559 to stay with low costs and we’re experimenting with Level 2 solutions like Matic or Fantom to absolutely SMASH costs

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
if we’re talking about security. did you conduct an audit

Dimitris S.:
Me and Andro and our company don’t believe in Audits in this space too much, as we’re serious developers with our names and doxxed identities behind our project.

Our Smart Contract is well documented, commented and meant to be understood, but we’re looking into getting an Audit just for auditing’s sake.
I’ll be honest with you, we’re keeping a maximum transparency strategy in whatever we do so we don’t believe in audits by third parties too much.

I’ll remind you that Moonrat was audited by Certik and TrustCert but it was re-entrancy vulnerable 😃

Dimitris S.:
Here’s our contract, take a look, guys.
We use Coinsensys development patterns and follow well-defined interfaces every time, to keep things clear:
https://bscscan.com/token/0x864ba0d98cdf816904994843a9bb76e4fdc33325

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Thanks for your answers 😃

Ready to jump to the next question?

Andro | Aspace:
I believe @dimisfou is typing some final comments

Dimitris S.:
One final thing before we move on, I think this is a good blurb of information from our own smart contract, regarding your previous question 🙂

I’m ready to move on, thanks Andro

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Thanks you both 😊

Q5 from Telegram User @Brainchest
Now it is not a stable market, which at any time can collapse and pull the value of BNB down as well. Then there might not be enough money to pay developers or other expenses that calculate salaries relative to the dollar.
Using BUSD could bring more stability.
Question: Why is presale decided on BNB?

Andro | Aspace:
BNB is the base token where we are launching so we want to stand true to our roots as much as possible which can be reflected in not only in our work ethic but in smart contract, and decisions we have carefully analyzed to ensure a solid foundation for Aspace

We do however, plan on converting a large sum of the BNB to BUSD to avoid any potential loss of operational revenue

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Thanks! clear answer👏

Ready to proceed to the last question of this part?

Andro | Aspace:
Yes please!

Q6 from Telegram User @Arisabela
In relation to the revenue share of your platform among users, creators and the project itself, content creators make 65% while users get 25% and the Aspace Reserve claims the remaining 10%. Can you tell us the purpose of this Reserve? Who will be able to access this funds and will this percetages be maintained all the time or are they subject to changes?

Dimitris S.:
Hahaha, can’t wait for the community part, honestly. It’s always so fun, in the Aspace TG too.
By the way, the community over at Aspace is still growing and not fully mature yet, and we’d appreciate any of you guys joining us and being an active part of our future!

Andro | Aspace:
The reserve is the main primary wallet where we will fund the infrastructure for Aspace. One of our main priorities is customer support. The reserve will help us keep the Aspace platform alive and stable.

If we see that Aspace is generating more than enough revenue to cover infrastructure costs, we plan to change the percentages to provide more value to the users and creators which are the body of the network

Dimitris S.:
Customer support is #1. We don’t want to go the route of Celsius or Coinbase

Gold Rocket | Satoshi Club:
Join Satoshi Clubbers❤️

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
Apart of those rewards, do you plan some staking/farming programs?

Andro | Aspace:
We dont want our users to have to wait weeks do get support. It is our #1 priority to ensure that the community has the tools and support to grow into the self sustaining decentralized social network that we envision Aspace to be

Dimitris S.:
Absolutely. Staking rewards, liquidity rewards, and development bounties all planned 👹

Dimitris S.:
We’re ready to get to the live part whenever you want us to, Satoshibros

Andrés M. | Satoshi Club:
Of course, is time to interact with our dear Satoshiclubbers, thank you so much for your clear and detailed answers!🥳👏

Amazing things are coming, applauds to your team, you have an incredible project.

Dimitris S.:
No problem, thank you so much for the great questions.

Part 2 — live questions from the Telegram community

Q1 from Telegram user @BJosefina61
One of the problems of social networks is the dispute regarding the creation of content and protection of copyrights, how does Aspace plan to deal with this aspect without compromising too much freedom and decentralization?

Andro | Aspace:
We are implementing similar technologies that Youtube uses to track copyrighted material. We are strong believers that everyone should have a voice.

Of course, we do have rules and regulations that will help keep Aspace a family-friendly platform.

Q2 from Telegram user @Gutike95
Will Aspace have the best design tools for NFT content creators? And also, will they have any mechanism that penalizes and prevents plagiarism of any content?

Dimitris S.:
Thanks for the Question Number 2, Gutierre. So:

Yeah, the Aspace Marketing platform will be integrated inside Aspace, as well as Aspace Gaming and Aspace Governance.
We’re building a marketplace for NFTs related to gaming, a place for streamers to build their own custom items and integrate them into external videogame marketplaces (like twitchdrops)

The difference here is: Our tools are all provably fair and based on Ethereum & BSC tech. No intermediaries, no profiteering, just Users and Content creators.

Plagiarism as you understand is a huge problem here and we’re planning for a 0-tolerance policy: Plagiarism will NOT be tolerated, measures will be put in place, and Users will be penalized in Trust Score for submitting plagiarized content. Certain trust thresholds will also be put in place to avoid rampant copypasting.

Q3 from Telegram user @KASG95
I was able to read that in addition to being able to create NFT content, with Aspace it will be possible to develop any type of dApps interconnecting Aspace API? Or will they only have to be dApps related to social networks where NFT content can be published?

Dimitris S.:
Thanks for your question, which is a continuation of the above question as well!

We plan for Aspace NFT Marketplace to follow Open Specs and be interoperable: To be able to integrate well with outside services, even Web 2.0 tech.
Same of course goes for dApps based on Aspace!

We want to foster a community of developers around Aspace, to be able to build on top of us, use our APIs, Data and Network to build Level 2 (++) solutions!

Andro is actually planning a development Hackathon based on our Aspace Prototype Alpha, to foster Developer engagement 🙂

Q4 from Telegram user @ethcypherpunk
Barriers to entry are a very important issue for a platform to be successful, can any user without having Aspace tokens enjoy the platform at least in the basics?

Andro | Aspace:
Yes! We are open to everyone! No need to hold $AETH or anything to use the platform. Our mission is to build a social network equal to Facebook and Youtube where the community is always placed first as true decentralization should be.

Q5 from Telegram user @Annodam1_0
How will your project address issues like hackers, money, and data loss? Is there going to be an inspection? Are we going to be safe? Are you planning a global expansion? Is there a specific target region that your project is currently working on? Is it possible to recruit ambassadors?

Dimitris S.:
As in anything blockchain & smart contract related, developer responsibility (we call it “developer’s onus”) is doubled.
For anything implemented in Aspace, we use the latest research and academic papers to build good tech.

The good thing about most Ethereum systems is that they are anti-fragile: The more you break them, the better they become.
In the same philosophy, in all our development we only use well-known and openly available Design Patterns (by Consensys and Parity) to minimize the possibility of failure.
We also have multiple circuit breakers and fail safes in case anything goes wrong.

We understand our responsibility towards you guys and believe you me, we’re deeply considering every, EVERY design choice in Aspace.

Regions targeted are The world 🌎, and we’re starting with mostly the US and Europe because most of our dev team is American or European 🙂
We want a vibrant community with people from all over the world, and we certainly want to tap into the Asian & Chinese Social Network community, to ensure healthy growth!

Q6 from Telegram user @xperia3
There are many influencers in the current social media platforms who earns a lot of money from their audience. How will you convince them to stop their current social media platforms and start on Aspace? Can Aspace be financially more beneficial for influencers?

Andro | Aspace:
Since we are planning on sharing most of the Ad revenue unlike Google & Facebook, we can afford to pay influencers 15% more than what they would earn on Youtube PLUS their viewers get to make money while binge-watching their favorite content creators!

Aspace was designed to truly reward the community because at the end of the day, thats what keeps the network alive 🙂

Q7 from Telegram user @slla1112
I read your consideration of using NFT technology to store images and posts on ASPACE’s blockchain. Did you make it happen? At what stage is your development?

Dimitris S.:
Not yet, we’re building it step by step.

Because both me and Andro have formal experience in running our own companies, we use formal methods for our development plans as well.

We are at Technology Readiness Level (TRL) level 2 -> 3: Proof of concept being developed.
We’re also now experimenting with using IPFS and Ethereum’s Swarm protocol to store images and Media as NFTs, not just fingerprints of them.

Q8 from Telegram user @Xusuo
Well my opinion one of the most important things about a project is a community, so I just wonder what are ASPACE plan to attract new people ? What event will you give to attract more user?

Andro | Aspace:
While @dimisfou is hard at work developing the app, I will be leading the marketing activities.

I plan on targeting different demographics every 2 months to ensure Aspace gains maximum awareness from not only the crypto community but the general public as well. Some fun events in the works are gaming tournaments, hackathons, and much more!

Q9
We see too many “Rug Projects” have been pulled in and out of “Scams” recently. My question Why should investors trust your project not to do the same? And many projects have been pulled in and out of scams recently. This makes us your potential investors very doubtful about the project that I just met. Please reassure us Why should investors trust your project not to do the same?

Dimitris S.:
Trust is a central part of Aspace. It’s the cogwheel that makes it work. And we are part of the BSC market long enough to have seen many, many scams go down. Me and Andro have been part of contract auditing teams that warn people of potential scams and rug pulls. Frankly, we are disgusted by it, scams have always ran rampant in parallel of bull markets.

So what we’re doing is: We’re bringing our full professional and personal weight to bear 🙂
Fully doxxed project with our full professional and academic identities behind it, to guarantee that this project has a future. We have nothing to hide, we run things transparently and we even manage Aspace’s wallets through vested smart contracts and lockable vaults. We want to ensure that everything, EVERYTHING is accounted for so you guys, our community, will remain with Aspace for as long as it’s getting built.
It’s not about price only, we have a responsibility towards you for delivering the product. We try to stay behind that as much as we can

Q10 from Telegram user @Chinthaka93
ASPACE ILO starts on 23 rd July. Now is the best time to discuss the ILO. How can we join your ILO and How can we buy ASPACE? Please share more details on APACE ILO.

Dimitris S.:
And thank you for the final question:

So guys our ILO is on Unicrypt! That means we have to adhere to some of their rules.
They have a pretty complex anti-bot and anti-sniping mechanism.

There is no whitelist. Maximum allocation per user: 2BNB.
The only thing is, 2 hours before the ILO opens to the public, users holding Unicrypt tokens (UNCL and UNCX) can buy first. This is Unicrypt’s rule for allowing us to be on the platform.

Part 3 – Quiz Results

In the final part, we tested your knowledge in terms of Aspace. They’ve prepared 4 questions for this part. The total reward pool for the quiz was 300$.
For more information and future AMAs, join our Social Media channels:
English Telegram group: https://t.me/Satoshi_club
Russian Telegram group: https://t.me/satoshi_club_ru
Spanish Telegram group: https://t.me/satoshi_club_spanish
Telegram Channel: https://t.me/satoshi_club_channel
Twitter: https://twitter.com/realsatoshiclub
Website: https://esatoshi.club/

Our partners
Aspace Telegram community: https://t.me/ASpaceApp
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ASpaceApp
Website: http://www.aspace.app

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *