Community Ownership

Help build the network.
Share in what it becomes.

Crowdio is moving toward a community-first operator model. Instead of short-term token-style payouts, we want long-term contributors to have a real stake in the company’s future.

Up to 10% Planned equity pool
Top 1K Eligible node providers
Long-Term Contribution over hype
Qualified Eligibility-based

Why we’re doing this

A lot of networks reward short bursts of activity. We want to reward the people who help Crowdio become durable. If you contribute reliable bandwidth, maintain a healthy node, and help the network grow, we believe you should be able to share in the upside you helped create.

The idea is simple: build a network with its operators, not just on top of them.

The basic model

Crowdio intends to reserve up to 10% of company equity for the top 1,000 eligible node providers. This is intended to be a community equity pool, not a first-come, first-served giveaway.

Participation would be tied to meaningful contribution over time, not just signup order or bursts of low-quality activity. Operators that run multiple healthy devices may strengthen their standing, but only when those devices independently meet service-level requirements and contribute real network value.

  • verified bandwidth contribution
  • node uptime and reliability
  • number of healthy devices meeting SLA targets
  • traffic quality and usefulness
  • consistency over time
  • compliance with network rules

Who can qualify

Installing a node alone would not guarantee participation. The program is meant for real contributors who remain in good standing, meet the platform’s evolving eligibility requirements, and keep their counted devices inside the network’s SLA expectations.

  • active participation over time
  • minimum contribution thresholds
  • each counted device meeting uptime and SLA standards
  • clean compliance history
  • required verification and documentation
  • eligibility under applicable law

The quick read before the deeper details.

This program is meant to reward durable operators, not fast installs. The headline numbers and score drivers should be easy to scan at a glance.

Section 1

Equity Highlights

The ownership structure and allocation shape, reduced to the essentials.

Pool Up to 10% planned operator equity pool

Reserved for contributors who help build long-term network quality.

Cohort Top 1,000 eligible node providers

Qualification comes first, then relative contribution inside the eligible group.

Model Contribution-based not first-come, first-served

Signup timing alone is not supposed to decide who meaningfully participates.

Focus Long-term model aligned with network quality

Reliable operators should matter more than short bursts of low-quality activity.

Section 2

SLA & Eligibility Highlights

The behaviors and thresholds likely to matter most when contribution is actually evaluated.

Verified bandwidth

Useful, measurable contribution should count more than raw installs or empty traffic.

Reliable uptime

Operators who stay online and stable over time are likely to rank better than short-term bursts.

Healthy devices

Multiple devices may help, but only when each one independently stays inside the SLA window.

Good standing

Compliance, trust, and policy adherence are part of the model, not an afterthought.

Contribution matters more than timing.

Being inside the top 1,000 eligible operators would not automatically mean everyone receives the same amount. We expect allocation to depend on relative contribution inside the eligible group.

Eligibility gate

Operators would likely need to pass contribution, trust, legal, SLA, and documentation requirements before any ranking applies.

Weighted contribution

Allocation is expected to reflect a mix of bandwidth, uptime, consistency, healthy participation over time, and the number of devices that remain active and inside SLA.

Formal documentation

Any future equity participation would still require final program rules, approvals, and legal documentation before anything is granted.

Important disclaimer: Participation in the Crowdio network does not guarantee any equity award, ownership interest, or future value. Any future equity participation would be subject to final legal structure, board approval, eligibility rules, verification requirements, jurisdictional restrictions, tax documentation, formal grant documents, and applicable law. Nothing on this page constitutes an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, securities in any jurisdiction.

Questions operators will ask first.

This page is the high-level story. The final program would still need formal plan documents and legal structure.

Does everyone who installs the node qualify?

No. Installing the node alone would not guarantee participation. The program is intended for active, eligible, high-quality contributors.

Do multiple devices help?

Yes, potentially. Running more than one device can improve your standing if each device is genuine, policy-compliant, and consistently meets the network’s SLA. More devices do not help if they are unstable, low-quality, or non-compliant.

Is equity guaranteed?

No. Any equity participation would be subject to program rules, legal compliance, approval, and formal documentation.

Will this definitely be actual shares?

Not necessarily. The final legal structure could use shares, options, restricted awards, phantom equity, or another structure depending on legal and operational constraints.

Can operators from every country participate?

Not necessarily. Some jurisdictions may be restricted or excluded based on securities, tax, or other legal requirements.

Can someone lose eligibility?

Yes. Fraud, abuse, inactivity, policy violations, legal restrictions, repeated failure to stay within SLA, or failure to complete required documentation could reduce, cancel, or revoke participation. If your counted devices go down or remain outside the required SLA window, that can hurt eligibility in the same way validator downtime can reduce standing in crypto networks.

Why shift away from short-term rewards?

Because we want the operator relationship to align with long-term network quality and company growth, not just short-lived payout behavior.