The infrastructure layer behind today’s digital economy rarely makes headlines, yet it decides how fast artificial intelligence models train, how blockchain transactions settle and how digital businesses grow. Forbes India recently looked at this layer through BitHash, a Dubai-based digital infrastructure company founded by entrepreneur Abdulaziz Osman, in a feature on the company’s move from bitcoin mining into wider computing infrastructure.
Why This Feature Matters To Us
Forbes India’s Brand Connect team wrote about how energy systems, data centres, computing hardware, and networking infrastructure now sit behind almost every digital service people use, from AI tools to crypto platforms. The piece placed BitHash among the companies building this layer and traced the company’s path from bitcoin mining into broader infrastructure work, while also setting that path against the wider regional push for homegrown technology capacity.
We see this coverage as an outside view of work our team has been doing for some time, written by a publication readers already trust. Rather than restate it in our own words, we are sharing the recognition here; you can read the full article here and judge the milestone for yourself.
From Bitcoin Mining To A Broader Infrastructure Role
BitHash began in bitcoin mining, running physical mining hardware alongside a UAE-built mining pool that lets users buy hashrate, manage mining gear and keep ownership of their own wallets through a single app. Every mining operation runs on real, owned hardware rather than third-party cloud claims, which is a distinction the company has built its name on in the local crypto market over the past few years.
As digital businesses started leaning on heavier computing loads for AI training, cloud workloads, and blockchain processing, BitHash’s hardware and energy background extended naturally into wider digital infrastructure services, including data center capacity, networking and computing resources that support both crypto and AI workloads under one roof. This shift mirrors a pattern seen across the wider industry, where mining-focused firms increasingly repurpose their power contracts and facilities for general-purpose computing as demand for AI capacity grows worldwide.
Abdulaziz Osman’s Approach To Infrastructure
Osman has spoken about blockchain technology as a matter of trust, ownership, and reducing reliance on outside systems. His “trust, but verify” outlook guides how BitHash builds its services: mining operations stay backed by physical hardware, and users keep direct, verifiable control of their accounts and wallets rather than handing that control to a third party.
That same outlook now informs BitHash’s move into AI-related infrastructure, where reliability, ownership, and accountability matter as much as raw processing power. The company’s local mining pool was also one of the first of its kind built and operated within the UAE, a point Osman has tied to the country’s wider push for digital sovereignty in technology infrastructure, reducing reliance on systems built and run outside the region.
About BitHash
BitHash is a blockchain infrastructure company based in Dubai, offering green-powered mining, institutional-grade hardware, and user-focused crypto services. It operates a UAE-built mining pool alongside an app for hashrate purchases, hardware management and account access. The company’s current work spans bitcoin mining, energy-efficient computing and the broader digital infrastructure needs of AI and blockchain platforms across the region and beyond, with regular updates posted on the BitHash news page.
Conclusion
BitHash’s path from bitcoin mining to AI-related infrastructure points to a wider shift in digital business, where energy, hardware and computing power matter as much as software. Forbes India’s feature offers an outside look at that shift; the full article is linked above for readers who want the complete account directly from the publication.


