The way a user can acquire, exchange, and sell non-financial assets will be through tokenization. We'll link real assets to its digital representation (in token form) with corresponding modules (proof of reserve, taxes, pricing, business rules, etc). The user will be able to redeem the token through 2gether. Imagine a Telco company that tokenizes gigbytes. For example, we will create a Telco coin which values 1 gb. The user will buy gbs and, instead of paying the Telco in EURs, he/she will pay using the Telco coin based on consumption.
For another example involving gasoline, a user pre-buys liters of gasoline and pays at the gas station with 2gether. At our Authorization Center, we receive the request that the user wants to pay 50 EUR worth of gasoline and we detect that the user pre-bought liters of gasoline and, instead of taking EUR from the user's account, we take the equivalent in the "gas" coin (with each coin equalling 1 liter of gas).
Through 2gether, you will also be able to exchange an excess of gasoline with a user that has an excess of kilowatts. We will have exchange rates between liters and EUR, and between kilowatts and EUR so that we can calculate liters/kilowatts in real time making the exchange possible.
The basic idea is that instead of having the token EUR, which represents everything, users will have real asset-backed tokens (1 gas coin = 1 liter of gasoline)
Nice! It's an amazing tool IMO. Thanks for the reply, now I have a better understanding of the contextual marketplace. More questions coming!
