Also a quick note that was someone with a large amount of tokens was targeted by a phishing scam, so it's entirely possible that these are being dumped for cheap.
Really one thing is confusing me a lot whether you are going to give airdrop in the form of ETH or in the form of TKR coins. I think it's better to replace the word airdrop to dividends.
Airdrops, as i know will be made in TKR, so there is no need to changing name for 'dividend'. If they will make payment in ETH that's other thing..
Pretty much this, calling them and issuing them such as dividends opens up a whole new can of legal worms. Airdrops are in TKR and not ETH (they'll never be ETH either as that wouldn't make sense).
Can I also remind everyone to please stay vigilant, it's
too easy to lose your wallet and funds in an accident. I know this doesn't have to be mentioned, but please do not click on any links from anywhere. Avoid using MEW if you can (a local node is much better and secure and not prone to phishing), don't use a simple wallet access method like a "Private Key" only, opt for Keystore (as you need to upload a file AND provide a password), or even better a Ledger Nano S.
If someone injects a fake self-signed certificate and somehow poisons your DNS then you're still going to end up having your funds stolen. We've heard issues with people being targeted by phishing, in the end there's nothing we can do as once the tokens arrive in your account you're entirely responsible for them from that point onwards.
We published a blog on account security about 2 months ago at
https://keepingstock.net/icos-and-why-security-and-due-diligence-is-important-in-the-cryptocurrency-world-2227161778fc , I'd suggest people to read it and really re-think if they're doing security the right way. Invest in a Ledger if you hold anything more than $1000, it's only a 10% investment at that point for your peace of mind.