Pieter12
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It's this new very weird and confusing digital art world. You register a digital work (video, photo, music even text) for a fee. The you sell that work but you retain the copyright. For the collector/buyer it is about ownership even though copies can be made (but not sold). And if the buyer resells the NFT, you get a percentage of the sale, unlike traditional art.So a NFT cannot be duplicated? Or the owner can make as many copies as they want? It is not clear to me how it works or why someone would want one.
Owning it, I guess. And reselling it if the value increases. But the creator/originator still owns the copyright and can do whatever they want: https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/story/2021-05-17/emily-ratajkowski-nft-sells-for-140000Other than reselling it and possibly making a profit, of what value is the nft to the buyer?
Exactly. Where are those magazines today? It may be a fad, but people with too much money on their hands are indeed buying some of these NFTs. Kudos to the young lady who has been able to take advantage of it while it lasts. Music has gone virtual, magazines and newspapers and to some extent books have too. (Old fart's remembrances here) I used to buy stock photography from agencies where the agency would have to pay $75 for research and a courier would deliver an envelope of slide sleeves. Now the research s free, you can even get stock images for a handful of dollars--even free if you work at it.The next Pet Rock, just pricier.
This is a story on the internet, so it has to be true, right? Maybe I can make $3000.21 a mo w/ a home rubber stamp business, or invest in one of those "Learn Electronics and Computer Repair At Home" courses I used to see in, what were those things called.....magazines?
While for most of us, it will mean squat, but for those who actively do sell digital artwork, this will be a big plus.The good aspect is the maker makes most of the profit, at least for now.
The actual NFT is just the 'box' or address the data is stored at. Whoever owns what that address actually points to can change whatever is hosted there. Or host nothing at all there. It is entirely unrelated to the actual content and offers zero protection against other people generating NFTs of the same content.
True, however the premise of blockchains is that blocks can't be modified after the fact; only new blocks can be added. So the owner of an NFT does have a mathematically verifiable claim that they were "first" to "own" the piece of content (since on some level, the token is generated from the underlying digital signature of the file) which of course is the primary/sole appeal to paying real money for assets that are by definition infinitely replicable and therefore worth nothing.
Except they don't have proof they were the first 'to own the content'. They might have proof they were the first to own a token holding an address that points to something currently holding the content, but nothing about that process verifies they have any ownership over it.
H L Mencken - No one ever lost money underestimating the intelligence of Americans.
H L Mencken - No one ever lost money underestimating the intelligence of Americans.
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