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Subject: "It's not just sports clips. Welcome to the metaverse (swipe)" Previous topic | Next topic
Hitokiri
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Mon Mar-01-21 01:10 PM

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22. "It's not just sports clips. Welcome to the metaverse (swipe)"
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https://www.reuters.com/article/retail-trading-nfts/insight-how-a-10-second-video-clip-sold-for-6-6-million-idUKL8N2KV6X9

How a 10-second video clip sold for $6.6 million

LONDON (Reuters) - In October 2020, Miami-based art collector Pablo Rodriguez-Fraile spent almost $67,000 on a 10-second video artwork that he could have watched for free online. Last week, he sold it for $6.6 million.

The video by digital artist Beeple, whose real name is Mike Winkelmann, was authenticated by blockchain, which serves as a digital signature to certify who owns it and that it is the original work.

It’s a new type of digital asset - known as a non-fungible token (NFT) - that has exploded in popularity during the pandemic as enthusiasts and investors scramble to spend enormous sums of money on items that only exist online.

Blockchain technology allows the items to be publicly authenticated as one-of-a-kind, unlike traditional online objects which can be endlessly reproduced.

“You can go in the Louvre and take a picture of the Mona Lisa and you can have it there, but it doesn’t have any value because it doesn’t have the provenance or the history of the work,” said Rodriguez-Fraile, who said he first bought Beeple’s piece because of his knowledge of the U.S.-based artist’s work.

“The reality here is that this is very, very valuable because of who is behind it.”

“Non-fungible” refers to items that cannot be exchanged on a like-for-like basis, as each one is unique - in contrast to “fungible” assets like dollars, stocks or bars of gold.

Examples of NFTs range from digital artworks and sports cards to pieces of land in virtual environments or exclusive use of a cryptocurrency wallet name, akin to the scramble for domain names in the early days of the internet.

The computer-generated video sold by Rodriguez-Fraile shows what appears to be a giant Donald Trump collapsed on the ground, his body covered in slogans, in an otherwise idyllic setting.

OpenSea, a marketplace for NFTs, said it has seen monthly sales volume grow to $86.3 million so far in February, as of Friday, from $8 million in January, citing blockchain data. Monthly sales were at $1.5 million a year ago.

“If you spend 10 hours a day on the computer, or eight hours a day in the digital realm, then art in the digital realm makes tonnes of sense - because it is the world,” said OpenSea’s co-founder Alex Atallah.

Investors caution, however, that while big money is flowing into NFTs, the market could represent a price bubble.

Like many new niche investment areas, there is the risk of major losses if the hype dies down, while there could be prime opportunities for fraudsters in a market where many participants operate under pseudonyms.

CHRISTIE’S ‘EMBRACES TERRIFYING’

Nonetheless, auction house Christie’s has just launched its first-ever sale of digital art – a collage of 5,000 pictures, also by Beeple – which exists solely as an NFT.
Slideshow ( 4 images )

Bids for the work have hit $3 million, with the sale due to close on March 11.

“We are in a very unknown territory. In the first 10 minutes of bidding we had more than a hundred bids from 21 bidders and we were at a million dollars,” said Noah Davis, specialist in post-war and contemporary art at Christie’s.

His division has never seen an online-only sale top $1 million before, he added.

In a decision that could help push cryptocurrencies further into the mainstream, the auction house that was founded in 1766 will accept payment in the digital coin Ether as well as traditional money.

“I think that this moment was inevitable and whenever institutions of any kind try to resist inevitability, it does not work out very well,” Davis said of accepting crypto payment. “And so the best thing you can do is embrace the terrifying.”
$208K FOR LEBRON JAMES SLAM DUNK

NFTs could be benefiting from the hype around cryptocurrencies and blockchain, as well as virtual reality’s potential to create online worlds. The growing interest also coincides with a surge in online retail trading during lockdowns.

The start of the rush for NFTs has been linked with the launch of the U.S. National Basketball Association’s Top Shot website, which allows users to buy and trade NFTs in the form of video highlights of games.

Five months after its launch, the platform says it has over 100,000 buyers and nearly $250 million in sales. The majority of sales take place in the site’s peer-to-peer marketplace, with the NBA getting a royalty on every sale.

The volume is rapidly rising: February has seen sales totalling $198 million as of Friday, heading for a fivefold increase from January’s $44 million, Top Shot said.

Each collectible has “a unique serial number with guaranteed scarcity and protected ownership guaranteed by blockchain”, the site says. “When you own #23/49 of a legendary LeBron James dunk, you’re the only person in the world who does.”

The biggest transaction to date was on Feb. 22, when a user paid $208,000 for a video of a LeBron James slam dunk.

One major NFT enthusiast, who goes by the pseudonym “Pranksy” told Reuters he had invested $600 in an early NFT project in 2017 and has now built that up to a portfolio “worth seven figures” in NFTs and cryptocurrencies. He asked to be anonymous to protect his family’s privacy.

Pranksy said he has now spent more than $1 million on Top Shot and made about $4.7 million by reselling purchases. Reuters was unable to independently verify the figures, although NBA Top Shot confirmed he is among the site’s biggest buyers.

“I see them as investments really, much like any other collectibles and NFTs that currently exist,” he said in an interview conducted via Twitter. “I’d never watched a game of basketball before Top Shot launched.”

‘EMERGENCE OF THE METAVERSE’

Nate Hart, a Nashville-based NFT investor who, like Pranksy, has been involved in the market since it first developed in 2017, has seen some popular digital art NFTs such as Autoglyphs and CryptoPunk surge in value.

Hart said he bought a LeBron James Cosmic NFT on NBA Top Shot for $40,000 in January, then sold it for $125,000 in February.

“We’re in awe, it just doesn’t feel real. We were in the right place, right time, got lucky, but we also took that risk,” he said.

“The space has been growing a lot. I do think that this is a little bit of a bubble. It is a bubble,” he said. “It’s hard to predict what the top will be.”

Andrew Steinwold, who launched a $6 million dollar NFT investment fund in January, warned that the majority of NFTs could become worthless in future.

But, like many backers, he is confident that some items will retain their value and that NFTs represent the future of digital ownership, paving the way for a world in which people live, socialise and make money in virtual environments.

“We’re spending a lot of our time digitally, always online, always plugged in. It makes sense to now add property rights to the mix and suddenly we have the emergence of the metaverse,” he said.

“I think it’s going to reach into the trillions of dollars one day.”

--

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Scam of the century - NBA Top Shot [View all] , MEAT, Sun Feb-28-21 10:39 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
RE: Scam of the century - NBA Top Shot
Mar 01st 2021
1
RE: Scam of the century - NBA Top Shot
Mar 01st 2021
2
If you didn’t get in at launch how likely are you to make 40k for your...
Mar 01st 2021
4
Its sustained by artificial scarcity and hype
Mar 01st 2021
3
“Artificial”scarcity is typically driven by difficulty of production...
Mar 01st 2021
5
      are you gonna buy a NBA Pet Rock or not!
Mar 01st 2021
19
Yeah this shit is absurdly dumb to me.
Mar 01st 2021
6
If thats a scam then art photography and prints are scams too.
Mar 01st 2021
7
if when you bought art
Mar 01st 2021
8
this is what I mean by saying this is for the future
Mar 01st 2021
10
      this isn't true at all
Mar 01st 2021
14
RE: If thats a scam then art photography and prints are scams too.
Mar 01st 2021
11
Art valuation is subjective and speculative
Mar 01st 2021
12
      There are digital artists making bank selling their art via NFTs
Mar 01st 2021
20
           th tech top shot is based on, already flopped once.
Mar 01st 2021
25
Initially I was about to dismiss this as a big scam
Mar 01st 2021
9
Printers take work.
Mar 01st 2021
13
      this isn't true either
Mar 01st 2021
15
      Sir
Mar 01st 2021
16
           am I wrong?
Mar 01st 2021
26
                RE: am I wrong?
Mar 01st 2021
28
                     how many people do any of us actually know
Mar 01st 2021
29
                          Access to a full and dynamic repository of stats killed trading cards
Mar 01st 2021
30
                               I forgot about trading cards when I started thinking about girls
Mar 01st 2021
31
                                    There must be a lot out there because The Ringer JUST started a trading ...
Mar 01st 2021
40
                                         how many of his best friends have ringer podcasts?
Mar 01st 2021
42
                                              LOL I just watched Steve Smith do a pack opening segment on NBA TV too
Mar 01st 2021
43
      But it's the limited edition-ness that gives it value. The authentic-nes...
Mar 01st 2021
18
After falling for the baseball card scam as a kid, i'm good
Mar 01st 2021
17
LOL after the huge downfall...cards are back
Mar 01st 2021
41
I just wanna know if these Bibbs prints I got can be cashed in yet...
Mar 01st 2021
21
This is all one big tax hustle
Mar 01st 2021
24
I was going to say, seems like a great way to launder money
Mar 01st 2021
33
      RE: I was going to say, seems like a great way to launder money
Mar 01st 2021
35
      IRS treats crypto like property. So for any profits it's capital gains
Mar 01st 2021
36
           RE: IRS treats crypto like property. So for any profits it's capital ga...
Mar 01st 2021
37
                RE: IRS treats crypto like property. So for any profits it's capital ga...
Mar 01st 2021
38
clubhouse is flooded with NFT talk
Mar 09th 2021
46
my thing is don't the tv stations that actually broadcast the NBA own...
Mar 01st 2021
23
I thought the NBA owns it.
Mar 01st 2021
27
      something else I'm curious about: can you sell these things outside of T...
Mar 01st 2021
34
      right the leagues actually own it and the networks pay to air it...
Mar 01st 2021
39
this guy made 1,700
Mar 01st 2021
32
I had a somewhat similar idea for music a decade ago.
Mar 02nd 2021
44
I think this has potential
Mar 09th 2021
45
NFT sales down 92%
May 04th 2022
47
To be fair everything is down
May 04th 2022
48
Nothing that has a change of 92% is just down
May 04th 2022
49
Up YTD: commodities, energy/oil, gold, metals, managed futures
May 04th 2022
50
thats a complete market collapse.
May 05th 2022
51
      It’s merely a flesh wound
May 05th 2022
56
shit is like an mlm scheme.
May 05th 2022
52
LOL…
May 05th 2022
55
my moonbird and pancake swap nfts are still up *shrugs*
May 05th 2022
53
So mad I didn't get into moonbirds
May 06th 2022
57
lulz
May 05th 2022
54

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