2.1 Introduction
Digital asset transactions (e.g., buying or selling digital assets) can affect
                various facets of an entity’s business. The appropriate accounting for such
                transactions will differ depending on the type of digital asset and the specific
                rights attributed to the asset’s holder. 
            There are many different types of digital assets, including various subtypes. For
                example, for digital assets commonly referred to as “cryptocurrencies” (which are
                not currencies, as discussed in Section 2.2.1), many are
                familiar with BTC, but there are thousands of other cryptocurrencies. Other types of
                digital assets include stablecoins, liquidity tokens, coins received as part of an
                initial coin offering, central bank digital currencies, tokenized assets, and
                wrapped tokens, to name a few. 
            As with any other asset, to determine the appropriate accounting for
                a digital asset, an entity needs to understand and evaluate the rights associated
                with that asset. This evaluation can be complex for digital assets, since there may
                be no legal contracts governing these rights. Further, a digital asset may be issued
                or created by a decentralized blockchain protocol rather than by a single central
                party; accordingly, there may not be a traditional “counterparty” on the other side
                of the transaction. Rights associated with a digital asset may be governed by a
                protocol whitepaper or tokenomics paper or may sometimes be embedded in code written
                into a smart contract.1
        Footnotes
1
                    
A smart contract can be defined as a rules-based agreement or terms between
                        transacting parties that are built on a blockchain network and may directly
                        control the transfer of digital assets between those parties when certain
                        predefined criteria are met.