Verified mining records
Mining activity becomes meaningful only after it passes platform verification and batch rules.
Derham Coin is built around a simple principle: users should be able to distinguish mined records, verified internal balances, pending mint amounts, and blockchain-settled DER.
Derham Coin records platform mining activity, groups eligible records for verification, maintains an internal account ledger, and connects approved settlement activity to the DER token on BNB Smart Chain. The platform is intentionally staged: not every internal balance is immediately an external blockchain balance, and not every launch feature is open before its technical and policy controls are ready.
Mining activity becomes meaningful only after it passes platform verification and batch rules.
DER is visible on BNB Smart Chain through a source-verified BscScan contract.
Account balances, pending mint amounts, and free internal balances are separated by policy.
Sensitive mint operations are handled through admin-only batch controls to reduce uncontrolled issuance risk.
DER is the platform token used to represent approved Derham Coin ecosystem activity.
BNB Smart Chain, BEP-20 standard.
DER is not a government dirham, not a bank deposit, not a promise of fixed profit, and not hardware proof-of-work mining. The name Derham Coin is a project brand name. It does not claim official connection to the UAE dirham, Moroccan dirham, any central bank, or any government authority.
The platform should not be read as a central-bank-backed or fiat-guaranteed product.
Mining, reserve, and liquidity participation carry market, platform, and technical risk.
Mining means platform participation records verified by platform rules.
Some withdrawals, audits, claim windows, and public reporting items may open in phases.
Every balance label should explain whether it is mined, verified, pending, free internally, or settled on-chain.
Public blockchain activity should be checkable through BscScan, while internal ledger activity should be explained by policy.
Minting and external settlement should move through official cycles rather than uncontrolled individual issuance.
Users should see fees, limitations, lock periods, and launch-stage restrictions before relying on a balance.
KYC, AML, withdrawal reviews, and suspicious-activity controls are part of the public launch model.
Material changes should be reflected in public policies, tokenomics, and community updates.