Q.O.L.T.
Quality Of Life Token
The Foundation of Decentralized Trust
BLOCKCHAIN 101
At its core, blockchain is a digital ledger—a transparent, decentralized record of transactions that cannot be altered. For our mission, it ensures that every charitable contribution is tracked with absolute precision, providing a layer of security and trust that traditional systems cannot match.
Step 1 — Choose a Wallet or Exchange
Use MetaMask, Trust Wallet, Phantom, Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini, or any Polygon-compatible wallet.
Step 2 — Send Crypto
Send POL | MATIC or USDC on the Polygon network
to: QOLT Charity Wallet (PCCS Donations) 0xfbf57719924405eda10a47d0f1f63c5f42b8bcf2
Step 3 — Blockchain Confirmation
Your donation is recorded publicly on Polygonscan, creating a transparent, permanent record.
Step 4 — Request Receipt (Optional)
Email: info@qOLT.charity with your transaction hash and donor details.
Important Notes:
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Donations are received as cryptocurrency.
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PCCS may hold or convert donated crypto at its discretion.
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Donation receipts reflect the fair market value at the time of receipt.
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No goods or services are provided in exchange.
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QOLT token acquisition is not a charitable donation.
How To Donate Cryptocurrency to PCCS (501(c)(3)
Blockchain for Beginners
This guide is written for people who want to understand blockchain and cryptocurrency without technical jargon or hype. It is educational, not promotional.
01
Understanding the Blockchain or Decentralized Ledger
Blockchain is a shared digital record. Many computers keep copies of the same record simultaneously. When information is added, all copies update simultaneously. Once recorded, information cannot be quietly changed or erased.
Blockchain exists to solve a trust problem: how to keep records honest without relying on one central authority.
02
What Cryptocurrency is (and is not)
Cryptocurrency is not a company, not a stock, and not a promise of profit. It is a digital unit of value recorded on a blockchain. Ownership and transfers are verified by the network, not a bank.
Cryptocurrency involves risk and does not come with guarantees.
03
Wallets Explained (Hot, Warm, Cold)
A wallet does not store coins. It stores keys. Whoever controls the keys controls access to the assets.
Hot wallets are always connected to the internet and are easiest to use.
Warm wallets are connected some of the time and often require extra approvals.
Cold wallets remain offline and provide the highest isolation.
04
Centralized V.S. Decentralized Wallets
Centralized wallets are controlled by platforms.
Decentralized wallets are controlled by the individual holding the keys.
05
Community Wallet
Community wallets hold tokens for transparency and long-term purposes. Tokens may remain untouched intentionally and are not considered circulating.
06
Token Supply & Allocation
Token supply is divided into visible allocations such as community, charitable, operational, and liquidity support.
07
Liquidity Pools (LP)
Liquidity pools allow buying and selling. The LP acts as the engine. Locking liquidity prevents sudden removal and reduces certain risks.
Red Flags
08
Be cautious of guaranteed returns, pressure tactics, hidden supply, unlocked liquidity, or vague explanations.
Red Flags to Watch For:
🚩 Guaranteed returns
🚩 Pressure to act quickly
🚩 Hidden token supply
🚩 Unlocked or unexplained liquidity
🚩 Concentrated control without safeguards
🚩 Buzzwords without clarity
🚩 Defensive responses to questions
🚩 Mixing mission language with profit promises
If you feel rushed or confused, PAUSE!