RE: LeoThread 2026-01-08 13-35

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Useful example of RWA tokenization to pass along. Describing each token as a "digital share" makes the concept much easier to grasp



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Tokenization explained in simple terms

Imagine owning something valuable in the physical world — a house, a plot of land, or a gold bar

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Right now those items exist physically and rely on paper contracts, lawyers, banks, lengthy processes and lots of waiting

Tokenization means creating a secure, transparent digital version that lives online

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That digital version is called a token

A simple example

Suppose a house is worth £100,000

Instead of one person owning the whole house, it can be split into 100 digital pieces

Each piece represents 1% of the house

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Each piece is a token

Then ownership can be 1 piece, 5 pieces, or 50 pieces

No need for the full £100,000

No bank required

No paperwork every time ownership changes

The system keeps track of who owns what

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Why do this?

Easier — buy or sell in minutes instead of months

Cheaper — fewer middlemen like banks and lawyers

Fairer — more people can invest, not just the wealthy

Clearer — ownership records are visible to everyone

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What is the blockchain part?

Think of the blockchain as a public notebook that anyone can read, no one can secretly change, and that automatically updates ownership

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Instead of one company controlling the records, everyone shares the same information and access

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So when tokens are bought or sold the notebook updates, ownership changes, and everything is visible to all, preventing disputes or confusion

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