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Today, software is widely sold as a service (SaaS) and media is rented or licensed to users in a purely digital form. As this digital content is easily copied, distributors can embed software into media to limit and monitor its usage.Digital rights management (DRM) solutions restrict buyers to use the media inside of the environments provided by the seller – as is the case with Amazon’s media platform and Apple’s iTunes. The latter will further extend the permissions to as many as five devices.
But like all DRM implementations, Apple and others do not enable buyers to resell their digital purchases.Such a resell function seemed technologically out of reach before a small team of developers introduced cartoon kittens virtually born on the public Ethereum blockchain in December 2017.
CryptoKitties made mainstream headlines, including one New York Times (paywall), when some of the game’s digital collectibles were bought for over $100,000. , several prominent venture firms consequently invested a combined $12 million into the company that created these images of colorful felines. Around the same time, CNN that a group of 10 digital art collectors spent $1 million for the rights to the digital photo of a rose.
This willingness of buyers to pay high prices for what are essentially easily reproducible digital images has observers scratching their heads in amazement, if not disbelief. So, why do people treasure some virtual items while assigning little to no value to others, and can virtual items truly be owned?What makes CrypoKitties and other virtual items collectible is a new blockchain-based function which assigns a single unique address on the public Ethereum blockchain to the item. Like most blockchains, Ethereum makes use of public-key cryptography.
As a result, all collectibles recorded on this blockchain are visible on the world wide web through a block explorer such as Etherscan. However, the ability to move the ownership of the entry (public key) to a new address is limited to the owner of the matching private key.A growing number of apps, such as the one offered by Coinbase Wallet or Enjin Wallet, support the transfer of these items directly from one user to another without the need to interact with another platform or middleman.
The latter entry is presumed immutable, which means it cannot be altered without impacting the complete transaction history of all the blockchain’s transactions. It could be said the entry is the "birth certificate" of the digital art.As of today, the phenotype and genotype information that determine the outcome of a new breed of virtual cats are solely maintained by the game developer, but future standards may allow these trades to be recorded directly on public blockchains. Standards on public blockchains are achieved through a public proposal process and ultimately decided upon by a combination of developers and network participants. Prior to adding the standard that allowed the creation of the aforementioned cryptographic cat game, a general token standard had enabled the creation of thousands of new tokens on the Ethereum blockchain. The latter function -- the -- is largely accountable for the rise of initial coin offerings.
I predict that the standard could allow artists to sell their creations to more than one collector; and, when applied to the real world, it could attest for the provenance of a production good.Fine wine and other collectibles could enter the marketplace at the time of inception and be bought and sold before entering a supply chain, which could potentially reduce distribution costs and fees from middlemen.
The report further postulates that in the future, “basically all the revenue will be generated through users’ in-game purchases.”I believe that advanced blockchain standards will empower game developers to create truly unique and limited in-game items that users will be able to trade outside of the confines of the game directly with other players or collectors using blockchain wallets. Moreover, the standards could allow users to transfer in-game items from one game to another.
Further reading: World Wide Blockchain