NFTs, the next wave of stupidity


"Aside from the fact that looking at "art" on a computer screen isn't any different whether it's an NFT or not... some of the world's finest paintings are drawn on giant canvases - 6'x8' or even 12'x16' and they're up to 500 years old or more. How the hell are you "liberating" the experience of standing in front something like that and seeing it for what it really is? It's like saying that taking a picture or video of Niagara Falls "liberates" the experience of actually standing next to that waterfall, trying to comprehend the volume and magnitude of it all, smelling the air around it, hearing the roar of the water, feeling the ground hum and the mist slowly drench you, seeing people from all over the world in the same awe as you, looking over the river into another country... It's just so fucking stupid. If you've been there you know that no pictures, no videos, no drawings or sculptures.... nothing can "liberate" the experience of actually physically experiencing that."
 
Q: So NFTs are just hashes of JPEGs and music and stuff right?

A: Oh, no, it's worse than that. They're hashes of URLs to JPEGs and music and stuff. The actual content is hosted somewhere else, often by a company that has no legal obligation to keep hosting it if they don't feel like it.

When you buy an NFT, you're buying the idea of owning some digital art. You're not actually buying the art. The artist doesn't even need to know or approve. It's as dumb as it sounds.
 
It's ridiculous, but it reminds me of the beginning of the internet;
people could register every URL, without having anything to do with the brand or company.
Some made a handsome profit selling...
 
Q: So NFTs are just hashes of JPEGs and music and stuff right?

A: Oh, no, it's worse than that. They're hashes of URLs to JPEGs and music and stuff. The actual content is hosted somewhere else, often by a company that has no legal obligation to keep hosting it if they don't feel like it.

When you buy an NFT, you're buying the idea of owning some digital art. You're not actually buying the art. The artist doesn't even need to know or approve. It's as dumb as it sounds.

It reminds me of this.:)
vKnIlnT.gif
 
If you don't understand that Ali's boxing gloves used to beat Frazier can be worth the same as the skin worn by the 2020 Fortnite World champ then you have a lot to learn.

If you don't understand that a broad walking down 5th Avenue decked out in Gucci is little different (give it a few years though) to somebody walking down a virtual 5th Avenue decked out in virtual Gucci then you have a lot to learn. (One of the interesting points is the broad could be wearing fakes but the virtual Gucci is not only impossible to fake, everyone with a click of a mouse can see it's 100% genuine).

It's all part of the new DAE (Digital Assets Ecosystem) and it's growing at 100%s a year and not going to stop.

If people want to dismiss the above, that's fine. But if you've got an open mind, understand that we're fast heading into an absolutly massive Digital economy, this is one of the best articles I've read on the NFT angle. Best to read it twice.

https://metaversed.net/Into-The-Voi...he-Metaverse-263f1ff8c13c455ea472f5689e01acaa

Fantastic points you bring up, the nonfungibility of the assets make them impossible to create fakes, and gives it an easy way to validate the real NFTs. The same way I can not copy and paste a beeple painting and try to sell it for 3 million. Each has their own unique ID on the blockchain. If you could have a $750,000 Wayne Gretzky card, would you prefer to have a physical version that can be stolen or burned in a fire or have a digital version where you can print it out to have, but the real one is stored on the blockchain, free of theft and fire with the right prevention measures.
 
Definitely a bit younger than 80:D

I keep learning all my life. I am a developer and algo trader. I just can not comprehend the concept of NFT, just makes 0 sense to me, like I said, perhaps old skeptic in me refuses to acknowledge the future.

Bankless'es interview of 3lau will open one's mind to the potential of NFT's for musicians.
 
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