jschligs wrote:NTFs are still unique in that they are on blockchain. Yes, you can copy the clip, the art, whatever, but in regards to being authenticated it's impossible to copy. That's where the value is.
It's just like you can copy a trading card, but any expert will know that its a fake.
Bitcoin to me is just another currency. The dollar is just a made up value, but overtime has become the dominate currency that we use to make transactions. Just because something is digital, doesn't mean it is made up money/value. And to Stannis' point, there are real projects that use blockchain technology that have stemmed from BTC. There is real value in that technology.
Let's use Jack Dorsey's "tokenized tweet" as an example:
https://v.cent.co/tweet/20Whoever ends up owning the "tokenized tweet", what do they get? Do they actually own the tweet? Because as far as I know, Jack still owns it under his Twitter account. And the tweet is still viewable.
The value I see is if Twitter shuts down or Jack deletes his tweet. And NFTs become some sort of digital storage vault.
Sorry if I'm being naive. I've been reading about NFTs for a whole 20 minutes.
I've been a collector of many things like retro video games (Sega games and systems in particular, still collect) and basketball and pokemon cards cards (still have them but don't collect anymore). It's VERY easy to spot differences between originals and fakes, especially if you have an original as a source.
I still have Pokemon cards that are valuable because they stopped production when they changed companies and don't make certain cards anymore. I think this is why they grew in value (you can't make a 1 for 1 copy). But I don't get how NFTs will grow in value if 1:1 copies are floating around.
I just don't see the appeal in owning an NBA TopShot clip because it has some unique code. It's still a verbatim clip you have on YouTube. And I don't ever see those becoming scarce.