The Datamine Network continues to expand its decentralized footprint with two major updates: the introduction of Burn-As-A-Service (BaaS) for community projects and a detailed breakdown of Lockquidity (LOCK) smart contract security. ## Introducing Burn-As-A-Service Our ecosystem has launched a new "Burn-As-A-Service" model to help decentralized communities host web portals seamlessly. By inviting a custom Discord bot to their servers, communities can generate SEO-rich stories extracted from shared social links. This content is published directly to community.datamine.network, powered by Cloudflare and a D1 database. Instead of traditional monthly fees, hosting is funded via on-chain token burns mapped directly to infrastructure costs. For example, hosting costing five dollars per month can be secured for five years by executing a 300 dollars token burn. ## Resolving Lockquidity Security Misconceptions Recent automated auditing scanners on platforms like DexScreener have flagged LOCK with false positives, claiming "hidden ownership" or "unauthorized balance modifications." These alerts are incorrect. They trigger because automated scanners misidentify the decentralized, ownerless vault contract as an active administrator. In reality, the LOCK contract is built directly from the secure FLUX codebase—which was audited for 120,000 dollars by Slow Mist. To guarantee absolute decentralization, LOCK was initialized by a factory contract rather than a developer's wallet, ensuring there are no admin keys, no DAOs, and no human control. Any user can call the external sweep function to route half of the vault's tokens to buy ETH and add permanent liquidity back to the pool.