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Q.O.L.T.
Quality Of Life Token
Created by Personal Care Calling Services, Inc., a 501(c)(3) nonprofit established in 2014
A charitable crypto initiative supporting seniors, veterans, and adults with disabilities who may be isolated or underserved.
"Compassion Meets Crypto"
Frequent Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to understand all of this to participate?
No. You do not need to understand every technical detail.
What matters is understanding:
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that blockchain records information publicly
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that wallets involve personal responsibility
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and that structure matters more than promises
This page exists so people can feel informed, not overwhelmed.
Where are the tokens actually held?
Tokens are recorded on the blockchain, not stored inside an app or company system.
Wallets—such as community, charitable, or personal wallets—hold the keys that grant access to those tokens. Anyone can view wallet balances publicly on the blockchain.
Why does a community wallet hold so many tokens and not use them?
Because visibility and restraint matter.
A community wallet holding a large number of tokens and remaining untouched shows:
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transparency
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long-term intent
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protection against sudden dilution
In many responsible projects, not moving tokens is the point.
Are tokens in a community wallet considered “circulating”?
No.
Tokens in community or reserve wallets are generally not in circulation. They exist, they are visible, but they are not actively traded or used unless there is a clearly stated reason.
What is liquidity, and why does it matter so much?
Liquidity is what allows buying and selling to happen smoothly.
Without liquidity, a token cannot function. With too little liquidity, prices can swing dramatically. A healthy liquidity pool acts like an engine—it doesn’t decide direction, but it makes movement possible.
What does it mean when liquidity is “locked”?
Locked liquidity cannot be withdrawn suddenly.
This protects participants by:
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preventing rug pulls
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ensuring the token remains tradable
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signaling long-term commitment
Locked liquidity doesn’t remove risk, but it reduces certain types of harm.
Who controls the wallets?
That depends on the type of wallet.
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Centralized wallets are controlled by a platform.
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Decentralized wallets are controlled by whoever holds the keys.
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Community or charitable wallets are typically structured to limit impulsive or unilateral use.
The important question is not “who,” but how control is constrained and disclosed.
Is cryptocurrency safe?
Cryptocurrency involves risk.
What matters is whether risk is:
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explained
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visible
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structured responsibly
No technology can guarantee outcomes. Good structure simply reduces unnecessary harm.
How should someone evaluate any crypto project—not just this one?
Cryptocurrency involves risk.
What matters is whether risk is:
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explained
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visible
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structured responsibly
No technology can guarantee outcomes. Good structure simply reduces unnecessary harm.
Is cryptocurrency safe?
Ask these questions:
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Where are the tokens held?
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Who controls the keys?
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What is locked, and for how long?
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What moves, and what intentionally does not?
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Is the structure visible on the blockchain?
A project that avoids these questions is telling you something.
Is this financial advice?
No.
This page is educational. It explains how things work so people can make their own informed decisions.
Why This Matters
Understanding structure helps people replace fear with clarity.
You don’t need to trust claims when you can verify the design.
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