• TootSweet@latte.isnot.coffee
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    1 year ago

    Look, I right-clicked $1.2 million.

    Chromie Squiggle #1468 - an NFT

    (Full disclosure, it took a little more than right-clicking to download that image. OpenSea apparently purposefully makes it hard to download images. Not terribly hard, though. Only took me a couple of minutes to figure out.)

  • HurlingDurling@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I usedto think Gary V was a pretty smart dude, back when I used to watch him during his early wine library tv days, I bought into his hustle mentality and up to some point he was the catalyst to push myself to become a professional and study a career. After years of watching his videos and seeing him grow in his advertising company he started pushing sneaker buy and resale (basically scalping) and buying and selling Pokémon cards and was confused but figured “to each their own I guess”, shortly after he started pushing crypto and then NFTs and at that point I lost all respect for this dude because he’s either an idiot and has been lucky all this time, or he’s fucking scamming his followers in some sort of pump and dump scheme and stopped following him everywhere.

  • platysalty@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Quoting a podcast: “So you’re saying I own this jpeg but anyone else can still download it and do anything they want with it? Bruh, NFTs are just jpeg NTR”

  • shiveyarbles@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    God, and to imagine that people were serious about that shit. I mean, the people not using it for money laundering and scams

  • stephan@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Honestly they can keep their pictures. Almost all NFTs are ugly and not worth the space on my hdd.

  • nfntordr@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I can just see Oprah going, “and now you own it! And now you own it! And now you own it!”

    • dQw4w9WgXcQ@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Whatever people generally accept as a tradeable asset can be used as a currency. Be it a painting, a very old coin or a banana taped to a wall. Currency doesn’t have to be directly useful, it just needs to be unique and give some kind of confidence in value. Paper bills are well established with high confidence in their value, even though they are really just pieces of cotten paper with a specific print. However, NFTs are linked to crappy artwork which seems to generally lower the general confidence in sustained value.

      The general idea of NFTs is fine, but the execution is a shitshow of dimensions beyond my belief.

        • samus12345@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          If you don’t know anything about NFTs, they sound really stupid.

          If you know a lot about NFTs, they sound really stupid.

        • dQw4w9WgXcQ@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Care to elaborate? I can see that the result of extremely pricey meme drawings is completely stupid. But the general idea of linking property to a non-centralized system which anyone could verify against, but basically no one could cheat, sounds like a decent concept to me.

          • Valmond4@lemmy.mindoki.com
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            1 year ago

            That would only be like, who tagged this digital copy first.

            What would that use be in the real world? I mean it’s not because you tagged my super invention paper before me that it has any legal ground.

            It’s like using a cannon to kill a fly too IMO, just secure a server if you need to know when things happened for example.

            I’m interested in what scenario you think it could be useful (except fraud ofc).

            • dQw4w9WgXcQ@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              NFTs are typically linked to digital assets, but it could also reference physical assets. Artists and collectors could link their physical artwork to NFTs to formalize ownership. And it wouldn’t have to stop at art. Ownership of cars could be linked to NFTs. Manifacturers could link NFTs to chassis-references such that ownership would exist in the block chain instead of (or in addition to) national registers. Similarly NFTs could reference houses, computers, chipped pets etc.

              I’m sure that there are a lot of issues with this, but the general idea seems fine at the very initial thought. Obvious flaws like increased hacking incentive or money laundering would probably turn it into a bad idea. But that’s my point. The general concept is fine, but the execution makes it a horrible mess.

              • Valmond4@lemmy.mindoki.com
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                1 year ago

                But why?

                And who’s in charge of errors in this immutable ledger?

                I only feel it being shoehorned into some possible usefulness, conveniently forgetting everything that won’t work.

                What is it trying to solve?

                Also linking physical objects, that’s even worse, use it a bit and it’s digitalisation will change lol. Also you want to sell your auto radio, but it’s linked to your Car-NFT, it’s Kafkaïenne lol!

                • dQw4w9WgXcQ@lemm.ee
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                  1 year ago

                  All of those questions can only be answered with a big shrug. I don’t know. I guess there exist cases of ownership disputes where NFTs would provide an easy answer, but it’s fringe. Errors in transactions would probably be tough to handle, so I don’t know what would be done there. I specified the chassis-reference on the car to say something that is unlikely to change for the car, but of course you end up with the “Ship of Theseus”-paradox.

                  And that brings it back to: it’s a nice solution to a problem which doesn’t really exist, and the application of it towards zero-value digital assets is a huge mess.

        • pingveno@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          It depends on what you’re using them for. If it’s just a URL to an image, meh. But some real assets can be hard to track without a lot of institutional infrastructure. NFTs are a possible alternative to the expensive, hard to grow financial institutions that underpin a formal economy.

          Take ownership of a house. When I was buying recently, there was a myriad of companies involved in the sale, including insurance companies in case there was a lingering claim to the property. In a country where possession of any given piece of land has very poor records, transferring ownership is that much harder. But what if instead they built their system around creating NFT corresponding to a an actual specification for the land?

  • bad_alloc@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    One thing I don’t get: How were people convinced that an entry in a blockchain somehow results in ownership. People understand ownership and its limits: They lock their bikes when they leave them somewhere, because if there is no enforcement you can lose property. The NFT scammers never mentioned enforcement once, yet somehow you “owned” some ape picture. How did that happen?

  • oshaboy@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Why do NFT bros even care that you download an NFT if the token is still theirs on the blockchain. Isn’t that the whole point of the NFT?

    • JakeHimself@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Bc they don’t actually understand what NFTs are. They actually just own some JSON that contains a key (owned by them) and a link to some server that hosts that image which presumably will always host that image.

      • kautau@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        In most cases the NFT isn’t even a file. It’s a URL to a centralized server. If that server goes down you are now the proud owner of a broken URL

    • EzekielJK@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      You don’t even own an NFT. Even if I bought a print of the Mona Lisa, I at least have a physical, tangible thing in my hand. It might be worth fractions of a cent but at least it’s more real than an NFT you might have spent actual dollars on.

    • TokyoMonsterTrucker@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year ago

      “I own a reciept that says I own the original Mona Lisa but literally anyone else in the world can possess an exact, identical copy of the Mona Lisa for free. I’m an incredible investor!!”

      • 𝕽𝖚𝖆𝖎𝖉𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍@midwest.social
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        1 year ago

        “I own the Mona Lisa; it’s in a hermetically sealed safe, and I have the key. The value is that I own the original, given to me by the artist; the countless knock-offs have no impact on the fact that I own the original.”

        I once read that some reproductions of some famois art pieces display better technical skill than the original artist. The paintings are objectively better. The original will still fetch more.

        Explain the difference to me.

        • TokyoMonsterTrucker@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 year ago

          Digital files are infinitely replicable and are indistinguishable from each other, which is evident using md5 hashes and similar technologies. They are meant to be exactly replicated and easily distributed. It is one of the most important components of network computing and an underlying, required principle for every large website on the internet. The originating file has no more significance or importance than the copies that function identically in every way. We don’t put the first copy of Microsoft office in an museum because it would be fucking moronic. You copy it and then you have the original.

          Your collection of NFT “originals” has no value. Get out before the market completely collapses. I guarantee your NFTs will be worthless in less than a decade. .

    • saigot@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      If I had an exact replica of every brush stroke of the mona lisa, it would be just like owning the original.

  • fades@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Nfts are not simply images on the blockchain. The technology is not a scam even if scammers use one aspect of it to sell pixels for ridiculous sums of money

    But please, don’t let me stand in the way of a misinformed circlejerk