The Good Tech Companies - Why Space and Time's Mainnet v2 Could Change How Banks Handle Tokenized Assets
Episode Date: November 5, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/why-space-and-times-mainnet-v2-could-change-how-banks-handle-tokenized-assets. Space and Tim...e launches Mainnet v2 with offchain data security for tokenized assets, solving data integrity challenges for institutional blockchain adoption. Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #web3, #blockchain, #cryptocurrency, #tokenization, #space-and-time, #good-company, #space-and-time-news, #tradfi, and more. This story was written by: @ishanpandey. Learn more about this writer by checking @ishanpandey's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Space and Time launches Mainnet v2 with offchain data security for tokenized assets, solving data integrity challenges for institutional blockchain adoption.
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Why Space and Times Mainet V2 could change how banks handle tokenized assets by Ashan Pondi.
Greater than what happens when the data behind a tokenized bond is wrong.
In traditional finance, a trade break resolves the error.
On-chain, the transaction is permanent.
Space and Time released version 2 of its Maynet on November 5, 2025, introducing custom off-chain data
tables that address this challenge for banks, asset managers, and enterprises moving real-world
assets onto blockchain networks. Financial institutions exploring stable coins and tokenized assets
face a fundamental challenge. When traditional financial data connects to blockchain-based value
through centralized infrastructure, the integrity of those assets becomes vulnerable.
A tokenized asset is a digital representation of a real-world asset, such as real estate,
bonds, are commodities, recorded on a blockchain. Think of it as a digital certificate of ownership
that can be traded instantly, but unlike traditional certificates, blockchain transactions cannot be
reversed. Space and Times platform operates as what the company calls a data blockchain. This means
it functions as a verifiable layer between traditional financial databases and smart contracts,
self-executing programs on blockchain networks that automatically process transactions when
conditions are met. The company's approach targets a specific pain point, ensuring that the data
feeding into these smart contracts maintains accuracy and security standards comparable to the assets
themselves. Greater than, in order for financial institutions to move real value on chain, the data
greater than powering tokenized assets must be handled with the same security as the assets
greater than themselves, said Scott Dykstra, co-founder of space and time. Greater than space and time
V2 gives these customers a way to securely connect off-chain greater than financial data to on-chain
value so they can deliver sophisticated financial greater than products with institutional-grade security.
The risk Dykstra references is concrete. If pricing data for a tokenized treasury bond is stale
by even minutes, settlements could execute at incorrect values. In traditional finance, such errors
trigger trade breaks, allowing parties to reverse and correct the transaction.
blockchain's core feature as ITS immutability, which means those same errors become permanent.
What MayNetV2 actually does? The version 2 upgrade introduces custom off-chain data tables
that institutions can configure for their specific tokenization needs. Banks and asset manager
scan now verify their proprietary financial data and connect it to smart contracts while maintaining
control over sensitive information. This matters because many tokenized assets require reference data
that institutions cannot make fully public, such as client portfolios, proprietary pricing models,
or compliance records. The platform allows these organizations to prove data accuracy without exposing
the underlying information. For example, a bank tokenizing a portfolio of commercial loans could
verify the loan performance data feeding into the tokens value without revealing individual
borrower details. This verification happens through cryptographic proofs, mathematical
guarantees that data is correct without requiring observers to see the actual data. Space and
time has secured adoption from entities including major banks and Microsoft, which integrated space and
time data into its fabric product earlier in 2025. Microsoft Fabric is an analytics platform that
helps enterprises manage and analyze data across their operations. The addition of space and
times verification capabilities means Microsoft's enterprise customers can now connect verified
blockchain data alongside their traditional business intelligence tools. The institutional context,
the tokenized asset market has grown as institutions search for efficiency gains in settlement and
trading. Traditional security settlement takes two days, T plus two, while tokenized versions can
theoretically settle instantly. However, that speed creates new risks if the data layer cannot
match the security of traditional financial infrastructure. According to a 2024 report from
Boston Consulting Group, tokenized assets could represent a $16 trillion market opportunity
by 2030, but data integrity remains one of the primary barriers to adoption. Banks exploring
this space must satisfy regulators that tokenized assets maintain the same controls as traditional
products. This includes audit trails, data accuracy guarantees, and the ability to demonstrate
compliance with securities laws. Space and times approach provides a verifiable record of when
and data was added, who added it, and whether it has been modified, creating a knotted trail that
regulators can examine. The platform now operates permissionlessly, meaning any organization can access
and use the V2 features without requiring approval from space and time. This represents a shift from
gated access to open infrastructure, aligning with blockchain's broader ethos while maintaining
the security standards institutions require. Permissionless access means developers and institutions
can build applications on top of the platform without negotiating contracts or waiting for onboarding,
potentially accelerating adoption. Real impact on financial products. The practical implications
extend to several financial products. Stable coins, which maintain a peg to fiat currencies like the US
dollar, require constant verification that reserves match outstanding tokens. Space and times
infrastructure could provide real-time, verifiable proof of reserves without requiring stable
coin issuers to expose their banking relationships or account structures publicly.
Tokenized bonds, another growing category, need accurate pricing data, coupon payment schedules,
and credit ratings to function correctly. These data points must update reliably, and any smart
contract distributing payments must access current information. A municipal bond tokenized on a
blockchain still needs to reflect the issuer's credit quality, local economic conditions, and
payment history. Space and Times custom data tables allow issuers to maintain this information
off-chain while proving its accuracy on-chain. Real estate tokenization presents similar
challenges, property values, rental income, maintenance costs, and legal encumbrances all factor into
a tokenized real estate assets value. These data points live in various traditional databases,
from county records to property management systems. Connecting them securely to blockchain-based
tokens requires infrastructure that can verify data without creating vulnerabilities. Final thoughts,
space and times MayNetV2 addresses a genuine infrastructure gap in the tokenized asset market.
The platform's value proposition rests on a straightforward premise. Blockchain's immutability
is a feature for transactions but a vulnerability for data. By creating a verification layer
for off-chain data, the company positions itself as essential infrastructure for institutions that
cannot accept the risk of permanent incorrect transactions. The backing from Microsoft's M12
venture arm and adoption by major banks suggests institutional validation. However, success depends
on achieving network effects across the financial sector. The permissionless access model is
notable, allowing open access while maintaining security. This could accelerate adoption among
developers and position the platform as infrastructure rather than a service. The question facing
institutions is not whether they need verified data for tokenized assets but rather which verification
solution becomes standard. Space and times early traction with major institutions gives it a head
start. If the platform delivers on its security promises and maintains reliability at scale,
it could become the data layer that institutional blockchain applications require. Don't forget to
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