RootData’s project claiming lets teams verify and manage profiles, lifting transparency scores over 30% and driving a 220% jump in heat and visibility across 220+ partners.
Summary
– RootData says more than 20 well‑known projects, including Bitway, Flock, Morph, and Solv, have claimed their profiles in the past week.
– Certified projects that complete information updates see average transparency scores jump over 30%, driving a 220% surge in RootData “heat value” and visibility.
– Over 120 projects have now been certified, gaining direct control over tokenomics, investor and team data, and syndication to more than 220 downstream data partners.
Web3 asset data platform RootData reports accelerating adoption of its project claiming feature, with more than 20 recognizable names — including infrastructure and DeFi projects like Bitway, Flock, Morph, and Solv — formally claiming their pages over the past seven days. RootData says projects that finish the claim process and fill missing fields see their transparency scores rise by an average of more than 30%, which in turn pushes their RootData “site heat value” up roughly 220%. The company says the move is enhancing community trust and market attention; the total number of fully certified projects now exceeds 120.
Claiming turns static listings into managed profiles
RootData’s claiming feature lets official teams “claim your project for free, get verified, and directly manage & update” key datasets on their dedicated pages. Teams can update tokenomics, investor lists, core team members, roadmaps and milestones, and calendar events like TGE dates, exchange listings, and governance votes. Once verified, teams can push updates via a one‑click sync that RootData says distributes changes in real time to more than 220 partner platforms, including exchanges, wallets, research terminals, and media dashboards.
RootData’s transparency score, described as measuring the “completeness and timeliness of project information,” is central to the approach. In prior analysis shared via a transparency alert, the platform highlighted that spot tokens with higher average disclosure levels (around 74.7%) tend to show shallower drawdowns and stronger rebounds than lower‑disclosure “Alpha” tokens (around 62.7%), arguing that better information reduces opportunities for teams to exploit asymmetry with retail investors.
Transparency as a competitive edge
That framing has led RootData and commentators to urge teams to treat disclosure quality as a competitive advantage rather than a compliance chore. Projects missing core information on financing, tokenomics or team composition risk being labeled “black box” listings and deprioritized by sophisticated users and data aggregators.
By claiming profiles and keeping them current, projects benefit from higher transparency scores, stronger on‑site heat rankings, and wider syndication across RootData’s network — an increasingly important distribution channel as listing venues, VC desks and retail traders rely on third‑party dashboards to filter signal from noise.