Domain Tokenization Opens a New Chapter—How Doma, which Raised $25 Million, Breaks Traditional Barriers
Traditional domain trading has always faced a core issue: large-scale transactions, high entry barriers, and liquidity difficulties. A high-quality domain often starts at hundreds of thousands of dollars, making it inaccessible to ordinary users.
Recently, Doma Protocol, which raised $25 million, has found a new approach—tokenizing real-world assets like domains. By splitting them into on-chain tokens, everyone can hold a portion of the domain's rights, making it as flexible and convenient as purchasing other crypto assets.
This direction is an interesting exploration within the RWA (Real-World Asset Tokenization) track. Domains themselves possess scarcity, revenue potential, and real value. Fragmenting and putting them on the blockchain can effectively enhance market liquidity and lower participation barriers. Whether investors, developers, or enthusiasts, everyone has the opportunity to enter this market with smaller costs.
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MEVHunterX
· 4h ago
Domain fragmentation is indeed a fresh idea, but I'm afraid it's just another fundraising story rather than practical application.
That being said, if high-value domain names can truly become liquid assets, small retail investors might have a real chance.
It feels like the RWA track is still in the exploration stage, and whether Doma can truly break through depends on subsequent actions.
This kind of tokenization plan sounds great, but the key is whether someone is willing to buy in.
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NullWhisperer
· 4h ago
technically speaking, fragmenting domain ownership sounds elegant until you actually think about governance nightmares... who decides what happens to the domain if token holders disagree? 🤔
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ApeWithAPlan
· 4h ago
The idea of domain fragmentation is indeed interesting, but can it really be implemented?
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LayerHopper
· 4h ago
The tactic of domain fragmentation is truly brilliant; finally, someone has addressed this pain point.
Domain Tokenization Opens a New Chapter—How Doma, which Raised $25 Million, Breaks Traditional Barriers
Traditional domain trading has always faced a core issue: large-scale transactions, high entry barriers, and liquidity difficulties. A high-quality domain often starts at hundreds of thousands of dollars, making it inaccessible to ordinary users.
Recently, Doma Protocol, which raised $25 million, has found a new approach—tokenizing real-world assets like domains. By splitting them into on-chain tokens, everyone can hold a portion of the domain's rights, making it as flexible and convenient as purchasing other crypto assets.
This direction is an interesting exploration within the RWA (Real-World Asset Tokenization) track. Domains themselves possess scarcity, revenue potential, and real value. Fragmenting and putting them on the blockchain can effectively enhance market liquidity and lower participation barriers. Whether investors, developers, or enthusiasts, everyone has the opportunity to enter this market with smaller costs.