Mira (often referred to by its ticker $MIRA) is a decentralized blockchain project that combines AI verification with crypto economics. Its core mission is to build a network where artificial intelligence outputs are verified in a decentralized and trustless way, aiming to reduce hallucinations (incorrect AI outputs), bias, and errors that traditional AI systems can suffer from. This verification is done through a combination of consensus mechanisms and distributed node participation, making the process transparent and verifiable.

@Mira - Trust Layer of AI

The network provides tools like an API marketplace, AI workflow integration, SDKs for developers, and consumer applications — all powered by Mira as the utility and governance token of the ecosystem.

Technology & Unique Selling Points

At its technical core, Mira uses a decentralized verification protocol that breaks AI outputs into discrete, verifiable claims. These claims are then validated by independent participants in the network using mechanisms such as Proof of Verification — a hybrid of Proof of Work (PoW) and Proof of Stake (PoS) — to ensure high accuracy and penalize dishonest validators.

This approach is designed to serve high-stake industries (like finance or healthcare) where AI reliability is crucial, offering a layer of trust and accountability that centralized AI systems lack.

MIRA Token: Utility & Governance

The Mira token has several important roles within the Mira ecosystem:

Economic Incentive: It rewards participants who verify AI outputs and secure the network.

Payment Token: Users pay for API access, workflow execution, AI verification services, and access to network features.

Staking & Security: Node operators stake Mira to participate in consensus, receiving rewards for honest behaviour and facing penalties for malicious actions.

Governance: Token holders can vote on protocol upgrades, emission schedules, and strategic decisions affecting the future development of Mira.

In most summaries, Mira is an ERC-20 token on the Base (Ethereum Layer-2) network with a maximum supply of 1 billion tokens, and roughly 19.12 % circulating at its initial token generation event.

Marketing & Community Campaigns

To attract users, the project leveraged several campaigns:

Airdrops & Rewards:

Multiple airdrop events were organized — such as the Binance HODLer airdrop — where holders of BNB who qualified in specific saving products could receive millions of Mira tokens as bonuses.

Exchange Incentive Programs:

When listed on exchanges like KuCoin, promotional events were run, including a 66,000 Mira giveaway along with affiliate and leaderboard campaigns to stimulate trading activity and community involvement.

These initiatives aimed to boost community engagement, distribution fairness, and liquidity — essential for listing success on bigger exchanges and attracting retail investors.

Launch Update & Token Sale Status

Originally, the team planned a traditional Initial Coin Offering (ICO) to sell Mira tokens to early investors. However, the ICO was ultimately cancelled, and the token was rebranded to Mirex ($MRX). The developers cited legal and regulatory concerns, along with a desire for a fairer launch model, as key reasons for this shift.

Instead of the ICO, the project has focused on community airdrops and fair distribution mechanisms, along with partnerships and exchange listings to increase exposure ahead of a planned full launch phase expected around 2026.

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