Layer-1 blockchain Harmony has proposed to mint billions of its ONE tokens in order to reimburse the victims of the Horizon bridge hack that saw around USD 100m of user funds stolen.
The Harmony blockchain would have to hard fork and increase the supply of ONE to mint new tokens. The team said reimbursement would be in the form of ONE tokens and span a three-year period due to the treasury's limited ability to provide immediate reimbursement.
In a blog post, the Harmony team put forward two working options and asked for the community's feedback.
The first option is "an estimated 100% reimbursement" that proposes minting ONE 4.97bn, which equates to a 3-year monthly emission of 138m tokens, or around USD 2.76m, using the token price of USD 0.020, they said.
The second option is "an estimated 50% reimbursement" that suggests minting ONE 2.48bn over a three-year period, which translated into a monthly emission of 69m tokens, worth around USD 1.38m using the token price of USD 0.020.
"The amount of ONE distributed will be based on the USD value of tokens lost across impacted wallets from the time we perform a snapshot," the team said.
They added that, from the snapshot forward, the distributions will be made based on the number of pre-calculated ONE tokens, not based on their fiat-currency value.
This means that affected users would receive a specific amount of ONE based on the snapshot disregarding the token's price. Some users argued that this "doesn't make sense," suggesting that it should change based on market value.
"The reimbursement should be at least based on current market value each month and not .02. So if One goes to [USD] 1. You just reimbursed [USD] 4 billion+ to those that lost [USD] 100 million," one user said,
Read more on cryptonews.com