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Unique unit of cryptographic currency

A non-fungible token (NFT) is a unit of data stored on a digital ledger, called a blockchain, that certifies a digital asset to be unique and therefore not interchangeable. NFTs can be used to represent items such as photos, videos, audio, and other types of digital files. Access to any copy of the original file, however, is not restricted to the buyer of the NFT. While copies of these digital items are available for anyone to obtain, NFTs are tracked on blockchains to provide the owner with a proof of ownership that is separate from copyright.

In 2021, there has been increased interest in using NFTs. Blockchains like Ethereum, Flow, and Tezos have their own standards when it comes to supporting NFTs, but each works to ensure that the digital item represented is authentically one-of-a-kind. NFTs are now being used to commodify digital assets in art, music, sports, and other popular entertainment. Most NFTs are part of the Ethereum blockchain; however, other blockchains can implement their own versions of NFTs.

The NFT market value tripled in 2020, reaching more than $250 million. The rise of NFT transactions has also led to increased environmental criticism. The computation-heavy processes associated with proof-of-work blockchains, the type primarily used for NFTs, require high energy inputs that are contributing to global warming. The carbon emissions produced by the energy needed to maintain these blockchains has forced some in the NFT market to rethink their carbon footprint.

Description

A non-fungible token (NFT) is a unit of data stored on a digital ledger, called a blockchain, that certifies any digital file to be unique. An NFT functions like a cryptographic token, but unlike cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, are not mutually interchangeable, in other words, not fungible. NFTs are created when blockchains string records of cryptographic hash, a set of characters that verifies a set of data to be unique, onto previous records therefore creating a chain of identifiable data blocks. This cryptographic transaction process ensures the authentication of each digital file by providing a digital signature that is used to track NFT ownership. However, data links that point to details like where the art is stored can die. Also, ownership of an NFT does not inherently grant copyright to whatever digital asset the token represents. While someone may sell an NFT representing their work, the buyer will not necessarily receive copyright privileges when ownership of the NFT is changed and so the original owner is allowed to create more NFTs of the same work. In that sense, an NFT is merely a proof of ownership that is separate from a copyright.

Uses

File:Hashmask 15753.jpg
This image, Hashmask 15753 (1 of 16,384) by "Suum Cuique Labs GmbH", sold with an NFT on the Ethereum blockchain.

NFTs of artworks are similar to autographed items. The unique identity and ownership of an NFT is verifiable via the blockchain ledger. NFTs have metadata that is processed through a cryptographic hash function.

Digital art

Digital art was an early use case for NFTs, because of the ability of blockchain technology to assure the unique signature and ownership of NFTs. Digital artwork entitled "Everydays - The First 5000 Days", by artist Mike Winkelmann, also known as Beeple, sold for US$69.3 million in 2021. The purchase resulted in the third-highest auction price achieved for a living artist, after Jeff Koons and David Hockney. Another Beeple piece entitled "Crossroad", consisting of a 10-second video showing animated pedestrians walking past a figure of Donald J. Trump, sold for US$6.6 million at Nifty Gateway, an online cryptocurrency marketplace for digital art.

Figma CEO Dylan Field, sold a digital avatar entitled "CryptoPunk #7804" for US$7.5 million to an anonymous investor, as well as a second avatar "Ape, Fedora #6965" for US$1.5 million in February 2021.

A 3D-rendered model of a home named "Mars House", created by artist Krista Kim was sold as a piece of digital real estate on the NFT market for over US$500,000.

In 2021, a digital portrait of the Fyre Media logo was sold by rapper Ja Rule at an auction for US$122,000 through his NFT venture "Flipkick", a marketplace for digital art.

The artwork "Gucci Ghost", created by artist Trevor Andrew, sold as a NFT in the form of a shivering GIF-ghost, for US$3,600 on the NFT market in February 2021.

In December 2020, a NFT artwork depicting seasons inside a series of vertical-rising rooms, was sold for US$22,938. The artwork was created by artist Blake Kathryn.

Collectibles

NFTs can represent collectibles like card collections but in a digital format. In February 2021, a LeBron James slam dunk NFT card on the NBA Top Shot platform sold for $208,000.

In 2020, 125,000 non-fungible token trading cards featuring images from William Shatner's personal life and career from the 1930s to today, were sold in nine minutes on the WAX Blockchain.

Games

NFTs can also be used to represent in-game assets, such as digital plots of land, which are controlled by the user instead of the game developer. NFTs allow assets to be traded on third-party marketplaces without permission from the game developer. In February 2021, Axie Infinity recorded a sale of $1.5 million for digital land titles in a single sale.

Music

Musicians can tokenize their work on blockchains using non-fungible tokens. On March 3, 2021, rock band Kings of Leon announced plans to release the first album as an NFT, by way of their forthcoming release When You See Yourself. The NFT went on to generate a reported $2 million in sales, roughly a quarter of which was donated to charity. Later the same month, American rapper Lil Pump did a partnership with the NFT platform Sweet to release a special NFT collection. On April 12, 2021, composer Giovanni Rotondo minted the first NFT soundtrack album with his score of the 2014 New Zealand feature Orphans & Kingdoms; and made it available along with bonus unlockable content among which a signed confession of theft.

Film

The motion picture industry has been slower to react to the boom in NFTs, in part owing to the technical challenges of storing digital movies - which are typically very large in size - onto blockchain technology, which is designed for smaller file sizes. On March 13, 2021, Adam Benzine's Oscar-nominated documentary Claude Lanzmann: Spectres of the Shoah became the first motion picture, documentary and Academy Award-nominated film to be minted and auctioned as an NFT, via the Rarible platform.

Several other tentative and experimental releases from filmmakers, studios and agencies have followed, with Legendary Entertainment announcing it would release an exclusive Godzilla vs. Kong NFT collection on the same day the film hit theatres; director Kevin Smith announcing in April 2021 that his forthcoming horror movie Killroy Was Here would be released as an NFT; and talent agencies such as UTA and Endeavor announcing NFT-related ventures.

Sports

Athletes are starting to take advantage of the NFT boom in various ways. In September 2019, NBA player Spencer Dinwiddie tokenized his contract so that others can invest into it. In addition, Dapper Labs, a blockchain technology-based company, has collaborated with the NBA to create "N.B.A Top Shot", a marketplace for digital highlight clips.

In March 2021, pro tennis player Oleksandra Oliynykova offered prospective NFT buyers the lifetime rights to part of her right arm.

Fashion

In 2019, Nike acquired a patent that allows for blockchain technology to attach cryptographically secured digital assets in the form of NTF's to physical products, such as a pair of sneakers, under the name "CryptoKicks".

Pornography

Some porn stars have also tokenized their pornographic work, allowing for the sale of unique content for their customers, though hostility from NFT marketplaces towards pornographic material has presented significant drawbacks for creators.

Market value

The NFT market has seen rapid growth recently with its value tripling to $250 million in 2020. In the first three months of 2021 alone, more than $200 million were spent on NFTs. The economic momentum NFTs have in the cryptomarket has exploded because of a trend towards digital collectibles. NFTs are also accelerating a larger trend of digital economic innovation as the public is increasingly favoring a crypto-economy.

Standards in blockchains

Specific token standards have been created to support various blockchain use-cases. These include the Ethereum ERC-721 standard of CryptoKitties, and the more recent ERC-1155 standard. The FLOW and Bitcoin Cash blockchains support NFTs.

Ethereum

ERC-721 was the first standard for representing non-fungible digital assets on the Ethereum blockchain. ERC-721 is an inheritable Solidity smart contract standard, meaning that developers can easily create new ERC-721-compliant contracts by importing it from the OpenZeppelin library. ERC-721 provides core methods that allow tracking the owner of a unique identifier, as well as a permissioned way for the owner to transfer the asset to others.

The ERC-1155 standard offers "semi-fungibility", as well as providing a superset of ERC-721 functionality (meaning that an ERC-721 asset could be built using ERC-1155). Unlike ERC-721 where a unique ID represents a single asset, the unique ID of an ERC-1155 token represent a class of assets, and there is an additional quantity field to represent the amount of the class that a particular wallet has. The assets under the same class are interchangeable, and the user can transfer any amount of assets to others.

FLOW

The FLOW blockchain which uses proof of stake consensus model supports NFTs, for example NBA Top Shot is run on the FLOW blockchain. Cryptokitties plans to switch from Ethereum to FLOW in the future.

Tezos

Tezos is a blockchain network that operates on proof of stake and supports the sale of NFT art.

History

In 2014, Counterparty, a peer-to-peer financial platform, was founded and built on top of the Bitcoin blockchain and attracted various projects including trading card games and meme trading in the following years

The first NFT ever created, titled "Quantum" by Anil Dash and Kevin McCoy was created in 2014, depicting a video of a set of spinning dollar symbols set inside a picture frame. The NFT is valued at US$7 million

In 2017, Ethereum started to gain prominence and American studio Larva Labs released CryptoPunks, a project to trade unique cartoon characters, on the Ethereum blockchain. In late 2017, another project called CryptoKitties where players adopt and trade virtual cats was released and quickly went viral, raising a $12.5 million investment and some kitties were selling for over $100,000.

In 2018, Decentraland, a blockchain-based virtual world, raised $26 million in an initial coin offering, and had a $20 million internal economy as of September 2018.

In 2019, Nike patented a system called CryptoKicks that would use NFTs to verify the authenticity of physical sneakers and give a virtual version of the shoe to the customer.

In early 2020, the developer of CryptoKitties, Dapper Labs, released the beta version of NBA TopShot, a project to sell tokenized collectibles of NBA highlights. The project was built on top of Flow, a newer and more efficient blockchain compared to Ethereum. Later that year, the project was released to the public and reported over $230 million in gross sales as of February 28, 2021.

In 2021 interest in NFT continued to spike, and a number of high-profile sales were made just in the first few months. In February 2021, the musician Grimes sold around $6 million worth of tokens representing digital art on Nifty Gateway. Later that month, an NFT representing the meme animation Nyan Cat was sold in an Internet marketplace for just under $600,000. On March 11, 2021, American digital artist Beeple's work Everydays: The First 5000 Days became the first NFT artwork to be listed at prominent auction house Christie's and sold for $69.3 million. In March 2021, Jack Dorsey, founder of Twitter and Square, sold an NFT representing his first tweet for over $2.5 million. The speculative market for NFTs has led more investors to trade at greater volumes and rates.

Popular culture

Popularity

In 2017, NFTs circulated by CryptoKitties, a project developed by Dapper Labs to sell ownership of unique cat avatars, jumped so much in popularity that a surge in demand took up significant transaction space on the Ethereum blockchain and slowed the entire Ethereum network in December of that year.

NFTs have become increasingly popular in the early months of 2021 because of recent high-profile sales. Some notable NFT sales in 2021 like NBA Top Shot’s video clip of LeBron James selling for $208,000 on February 22, 3LAU’s album bringing in $11.6 million in sales as of February 28, and digital artist Beeple’s piece selling for $69.3 million on March 11, have made NFTs an especially current topic in popular culture. In March 2021 alone, NFT sales exceeded $220 million making up nearly half of all-time NFT sales ever at the time. This renewed interest in NFTs, particularly those in art, music, and sports, have made way into mainstream consciousness, especially amongst the younger generation. In a March 27, 2021 Saturday Night Live episode, cast members even poked fun at this growing niche with a comedy skit on NFTs.

As the NFT market expands, demand for these unique digital assets have exploded and is expected to grow throughout 2021. Many investors are willing to pay high rates to secure and promote NFTs and continue to do so because they anticipate NFTs to be the biggest and most profitable collectibles in the future. Venture capitalist David Pakman has claimed that the growing value of NFTs is redefining the major entertainment industry as of early 2021. Investors like Mark Cuban have already begun to propose new ways of implementing NFT technology to monetize sports tickets and merchandise sales.

Environmental concerns

NFT purchases and sales are enmeshed in a controversy regarding the high energy use, and consequent greenhouse gas emissions, associated with blockchain transactions. A key aspect of this is the proof-of-work protocol required to regulate and verify blockchain transactions on public networks, which consumes a large amount of electricity. Estimating the carbon footprint of a given NFT transaction involves a variety of assumptions about the manner in which the transaction is set up on the blockchain, the behavior of blockchain miners, and the amount of renewable energy being used on these networks. An analogy that’s been described for this is the footprint associated with an additional passenger on a given airline flight.

Some more recent NFT technologies use alternative validation protocols, such as proof of stake, that have much less energy usage for a given validation cycle. Other approaches to reducing electricity include the use of off-chain transactions as part of minting an NFT. A number of NFT art sites are also looking to address these concerns, and some are moving to using technologies and protocols with lower associated footprints. Others now allow the option of buying carbon offsets when making NFT purchases, although the environmental benefits of this have been questioned. In some instances, NFT artists have decided against selling some of their own work to limit carbon emission contributions.

See also

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