DEX Drift on Solana plans to airdrop 100 million DRIFT tokens
Golden Finance reported that the Drift website and people familiar with the matter revealed that the Drift protocol, a decentralized exchange based on Solana, plans to launch the DRIFT governance token, airdrop assets to users within a few weeks, and establish a token-based governance structure. The new tokens follow a three-month points program, with the majority of the 100 million tokens in this airdrop going to long-term Drift users. In DRIFT's token economic model, 10% of the total supply of DRIFT will be allocated to users, 22% to venture investors, and 43% of tokens will be used for ecosystem development (which may include trading rewards, liquidity incentives, and future airdrop), 25% of the tokens are reserved for payment to Drift contributors for protocol development.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
After bitcoin returns to $90,000, is Christmas or a Christmas crash coming next?
This Thanksgiving, we are grateful for bitcoin returning to $90,000.

Bitcoin security reaches a historic high, but miner revenue drops to a historic low. Where will mining companies find new sources of income?
The current paradox of the Bitcoin network is particularly striking: while the protocol layer has never been more secure due to high hash power, the underlying mining industry is facing pressure from capital liquidation and consolidation.

What are the privacy messaging apps Session and SimpleX donated by Vitalik?
Why did Vitalik take action? From content encryption to metadata privacy.

The covert war escalates: Hyperliquid faces a "kamikaze" attack, but the real battle may have just begun
The attacker incurred a loss of 3 million in a "suicidal" attack, but may have achieved breakeven through external hedging. This appears more like a low-cost "stress test" targeting the protocol's defensive capabilities.
