Deed Bitcoin is a public filing service for digital asset ownership. It does one thing: take a collection of Bitcoin or STX and produce a Deed — a permanent, on-chain document modelled after a land title or mortgage file. The Deed records the claim. The contract holds the assets. You hold the Deed.
You walk into the lobby, check in at the reception desk, and take the elevator to the filing floor. A clerk sits you down and asks four things: which coin, how much, who your heir is, and when the contract becomes theirs to claim. You leave with a Deed in your wallet.
The smart contract holds the assets. The platform does not. The Deed is not attached to an identity — it is attached to a wallet. What you hold is a document that proves a claim exists. The gap between holding a claim and holding an asset is where Deed Bitcoin operates.
Not a receipt. The document itself — like a property deed or mortgage file. Permanent, on-chain, yours from the moment the clerk hands it over. It survives anything that happens to the platform. The contract keeps running. The Deed stays valid.