🔐 Update on the Upcoming Verification Process
We know many of you are looking forward to verification - and we’re stepping closer to that moment.
This process is designed to be structured, transparent, and fair, ensuring every qualified Human Node moves forward with clarity.
@Jakarfintechplc@sidrachain sidrachain DEAR SIDRA CORETEAM I'M HERE TO WRITE ON BEHALF OF GLOBAL SIDRA COMMUNITY TO COMPLAIN ABOUT THE DEDUCTION OF OUR SIDRA TOKEN IN OUR MINING BALANCE SINCE LAST MONTH ..AND THERE'S NO ANY UPDATE FROM YOU,KINDLY CONSIDER OUR ISSUES THANK.
CEO JAKAR SHARHI...
@sidrachain DEAR SIDRA CORETEAM I'M HERE TO WRITE ON BEHALF OF GLOBAL SIDRA COMMUNITY TO COMPLAIN ABOUT THE DEDUCTION OF OUR SIDRA TOKEN IN OUR MINING BALANCE SINCE LAST MONTH ..AND THERE'S NO ANY UPDATE FROM YOU,KINDLY CONSIDER OUR ISSUES THANK.
CEO JAKAR SHARHI...
The @SidraChain ecosystem has gone quieter than ever no updates from the team, no visible progress, and after nearly three years, the community’s patience is running out. Many people are now stepping away from the project entirely.
What exactly is the future of SidraChain the project once expected to transform digital currency adoption across the Arab world?
Alhamdulillahi. These people are theorizing this aspect of Maulid in a way that differs from their traditional ways. It wasn’t so few years ago when Izala was at its boiling point of sheer exuberance and hardened hostility.
I personally admire people that change stance when superior argument shows up. But that’s not the borne of contention, how do you see people you once castigated and catapulted out of islam for the same belief you are now in line with? The least you can do as a person that rode on the slogan of crushing off bidi’ah and reinstating Sunnah is to tender an unreserved apology.
2014 – The Disappearance That Wasn’t
The world believed Satoshi Nakamoto had vanished years ago, leaving only Bitcoin’s code and a trail of mystery. But the truth? He never left. He was quietly watching the crypto space grow—watching the miners build giant warehouses, watching ordinary people get locked out of the revolution he started.
“This isn’t what I wanted,” Satoshi thought. “Crypto was supposed to be for everyone—not just for those with expensive rigs and endless power.”
He leaned back in his chair, tapping his pen against a notebook filled with blockchain diagrams. He knew exactly what it took to build a cryptocurrency—consensus mechanisms, security layers, ledger integrity—because he had done it before.
And that’s when the thought struck him:
“If I could make Bitcoin work with computers, I can make the next one work with something almost everyone already has—a phone.”
The idea burned in his mind: a mobile-mined coin, secured not by power-hungry hardware, but by trust circles and social consensus. Mining without destroying the planet. A network that grows because people believe in it, not because machines fight over it.
Over the next few years, he built quietly, under a different name: Dr. Nicolas Kokkalis. A respected Stanford professor by day, a silent architect of the next phase of crypto by night. He sketched the blueprints for an ecosystem where millions could mine with a tap, trade with a smile, and be part of the blockchain revolution without needing a single watt of extra power.
By 2018, the prototype was ready. The world would call it Pi Network.
And as millions began tapping their screens to mine, the man who had once been called Satoshi Nakamoto smiled in the shadows. His first vision had been Bitcoin. His second… was Pi.
“Phase one was freedom. Phase two… is for everyone.”
@PiCoreTeam@nkokkalis