We’ve spent years tokenizing assets.
Money. Shares. Art. Ownership.
Everything that goes on the positive side of a balance sheet. But finance doesn’t work like that.
Finance runs on double-entry accounting, assets on one side and liabilities on the other. And right now?
Blockchain barely touches the second half.
That’s where the concept of liability tokens comes in.
A simple twist. A powerful implication.
Instead of representing what you own, they represent what you owe.
And here’s the interesting part:
With assets → you send
With liabilities → the receiver must accept
Transfer logic flips. Control shifts. Entirely new dynamics emerge.
Think about it. Debt markets. Credit systems. On-chain accounting. Structured finance.
All of it suddenly becomes natively programmable.
This is the kind of innovation that matters.
Not just new tokens. But new ways tokens behave.
Because the future of blockchain is designing primitives that mirror how the real world actually works… or improve it!
Big respect to Keir Finlow-Bates for pushing this thinking forward.
This is how the space evolves: not louder narratives… but deeper building.
At OffChain, we love this kind of question:
- What are we not seeing yet?
- What is still missing?
- What happens when someone flips one simple rule?
Because sometimes, innovation isn’t adding something new.
It’s realizing what’s been missing all along. 🧡