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What are NFTs, and how do they work? NFTs have blown up in the past year. The problem is that, instead of people sharing art, we have a lot of pixelated images that immediately go down in value within a few days. Are people using NFTs the wrong way? Also, should NFTs have a use case?
This thread by Khamisi Hamisi, Sara Pinto, Daniel Guzman and Mónica Freitas occurred in slogging's official #blockchain channel, and has been edited for readability.
Let's talk about NFTs
NFTs work the same way as physical art. The only difference is that you get a digital copy of the piece of art you just bought.
For example, when you buy the Monalisa, you get a physical painting of Monalisa delivered to you. It will be original and authentic. Other people can have replicas, but you will have the original copy.
On the other hand, when you buy an NFT, you get a digital copy of the art sent to you. People can cut paste the image but cannot copy the original file stored in the blockchain. You control the distribution and some of the rights.
The Monalisa has a story behind it on how it came about. The story behind it makes it valuable. Shouldn't we have such types of NFTs? NFTs that tell a story and not just images of cats and cows that are pixelated.
To be a top NFT artist, one needs to have unique art. For example, we have the Bored Ape NFTs. They have created a community around their NFTs and are one of the top-selling NFTs on OpenSea. Bored Ape airdropped a serum that mutates the apes giving you a new unique mutated one with extra value. It encouraged people to buy more apes. There are only 10,000 apes.
Here are a few takeaways:
Any artist can start working with NFTs. You can sell exclusive rights to your music via NFTs. Also, you can take good images of your paintings and sell them as NFTs. You can decide to accompany the digital art with the original physical painting or sell the NFT. The possibilities are endless.