The witch self-reporting plan of LayerZero, a full-chain interoperability protocol with a valuation exceeding $3 billion, is set to officially end at the end of May. LayerZero officials are currently conducting final reviews. However, at this time, a witch hunter has revealed that they were bribed by a reported individual. In response, Bryan Pellegrino, CEO of LayerZero, urged reporters not to modify or delete their reports, as this may result in the inability to receive rewards.
With the end of the first phase, LayerZero has preliminarily identified 803,093 addresses as witch accounts. After the second phase officially ended on May 30th, LayerZero stated that they will compile a complete list of witch addresses, estimating that the total number of witch addresses will exceed one million. Through Nansen’s behavior model, 60,995 witch-related wallets have been discovered.
It is worth noting that the witch hunter @SybilHorror6 revealed today that after submitting a report for public review, an anonymous individual contacted them online and offered $12,000 as a bribe to delete 3 witch-related clusters and a total of 172 reported addresses from the report.
In response to this, Bryan Pellegrino, CEO of LayerZero, strongly advised against modifying or deleting reports, emphasizing that the LayerZero team has original records on GitHub and Commonwealth, and editing or deleting reports may result in the inability to receive rewards.
Previously, Bryan Pellegrino stated on the 7th that the witch review work is not yet complete, but did not disclose a specific timeline. However, he emphasized that the airdrop will definitely take place in June.
On the 5th, Bryan Pellegrino expressed his hope for another two months to review the witches, mentioning some very obvious large witch clusters involving thousands of addresses. Due to time constraints, he had to give up reviewing them, and the TGE schedule for LayerZero will not change.