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The du Tech entry into Bitcoin mining has captured widespread attention across the UAE’s digital asset ecosystem. When du Tech—the innovation arm of telecom operator du—unveiled its Cloud Miner service with a Burj Khalifa laser show, it made history as the first telco in the country to introduce Bitcoin mining to the public.
Yet the announcement lacked crucial technical details, prompting speculation over whether du Tech’s Cloud Miner relied on ASICs, GPUs, or third-party hashpower.
The launch initially raised eyebrows among industry experts. While du Tech positioned Cloud Miner as a “secure, transparent, and fully managed” service, it did not specify what type of mining machines were used or how the hashrate was generated.
Observers questioned whether the du Tech entry into Bitcoin mining was a genuine infrastructure investment or a marketing experiment aimed at casual participants unlikely to achieve profitability. Some assumed du Tech was reselling hashrate from global pools or repurposing idle data-center compute capacity rather than running ASIC rigs.
To clarify market confusion, Unlock Blockchain reached out to du Tech for comment.
A du Tech spokesperson confirmed: “Yes, du Tech is operating dedicated ASIC mining hardware within our UAE data centers. All infrastructure is built and operated by us from the hardware to the platform. We have built a web platform where clients will have a dashboard that will show them their hash-rate performance directly from our data center, uptime, rewards, and pay-outs. Transparency is key for us. The Cloud Miner service is positioned as one of du Tech products that has followed all regulatory frameworks.”
When asked about equipment, du Tech added that it is using “the latest generation machines”, though the manufacturer and model were not disclosed.
While this statement clarifies du Tech’s entry into Bitcoin mining, the setup is yet to be independently verified, and Unlock Blockchain will meet du Tech executives shortly for further review.
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This confirmation places du Tech among the first telecom companies globally—and the first in the UAE—to run ASIC-based Bitcoin mining infrastructure within its own data centers.
The company claims full control “from the hardware to the platform,” integrating UAE Pass, KYC/AML verification, and two-factor authentication for user access. This marks a rare blend of regulated telecom infrastructure and blockchain operations, reflecting how du Tech is approaching digital assets through a compliance-first lens.
Although du Tech’s claim positions the service as a technological first, profitability for Cloud Miner users remains uncertain. Without disclosed efficiency metrics, pool affiliations, or return models, it’s unclear whether participants will achieve meaningful rewards or primarily gain exposure to the mining process.
This ambiguity reflects a broader challenge facing all cloud-mining services: balancing accessibility for new users with transparency and sustainability.
The du Tech entry into Bitcoin mining signals more than a single product—it represents du’s evolution toward a digital infrastructure brand. As highlighted by Jasim Al Awadi, du Tech aims to “make advanced digital technologies more accessible while ensuring reliability, sustainability, and compliance.”
By launching Cloud Miner under the du Tech portfolio, the company is clearly signaling its intent to move beyond telecom services into the digital infrastructure economy — merging data-center capacity, blockchain innovation, and AI-driven compute models.
What began as a brief and ambiguous announcement now appears to be a serious infrastructure initiative, at least by du Tech’s own account. The company claims to operate ASIC machines within UAE data centers — a first for the national telecom sector.
Still, the setup has yet to be independently verified, and Unlock Blockchain will meet with du Tech executives soon to examine the operation further.
For now, du Tech’s entry into Bitcoin mining stands as a symbolic and potentially pivotal step in the UAE’s push toward merging traditional infrastructure with next-generation digital assets.




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