Subscribe
CryptoWeb.xyz
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Altcoin
  • Bitcoin
  • Blockchain
  • Ethereum
  • Litecoin
  • Home
  • News
  • Altcoin
  • Bitcoin
  • Blockchain
  • Ethereum
  • Litecoin
No Result
View All Result
CryptoWeb.xyz
No Result
View All Result

Why Would Anyone Buy NFT – A Link To A JPEG File?

Why Would Anyone Buy NFT – A Link To A JPEG File? 101
Unlimited Possibilities by Buddyart00. Last sold for USD 3,707. Source: async.art

Aaron Hertzmann, Affiliate Faculty of Computer Science, University of Washington.
_______

As an academic researcher, developer of artistic technology and amateur artist, I was quite skeptical about crypto art when I first read about it several years ago.

However, I follow a community of artists on social media, and some of the artists there whom I respect, like Mario Klingemann and Jason Bailey, embraced and advocated for crypto art. Within the past few months, activity and prices seemed to snowball. I started thinking it deserves to be taken seriously.

Related articles

August PCE Inflation Data: Federal Reserve’s Key Measure Dips, Easing Market Concerns

Omer Amsel, Head of Web3 at Fireblocks, on Web2 Companies Moving to Web3, and Crypto Going Mainstream | Ep. 269

Then the Beeple sale happened.

On March 11, Beeple, a computer science graduate whose real name is Mike Winkelmann, auctioned a piece of crypto art at Christie’s for USD 69m.

The winning bidder is now named in a digital record that confers ownership. This record, called a non-fungible token, or NFT, is stored in a shared global database. This database is decentralized using blockchain, so that no single individual or company controls the database. As long as the specific blockchain survives in the world, anyone can read or access it, and no one can change it.

But “ownership” of crypto art confers no actual rights, other than being able to say that you own the work. You don’t own the copyright, you don’t get a physical print, and anyone can look at the image on the web. There is merely a record in a public database saying that you own the work – really, it says you own the work at a specific URL.

So why would anyone buy crypto art – let alone spend millions on what’s essentially a link to a JPEG file?

Art is inherently social

It might be helpful to think about crypto art in the context of why people buy original works of art.

Some people buy art for their homes, hoping to incorporate it into their living spaces for pleasure and inspiration.

But art also plays many important social roles. The art in your home communicates your interests and tastes. Artworks can spark conversation, whether they’re in museums or homes. People form communities around their passion for the arts, whether it’s through museums and galleries, or magazines and websites. Buying work supports the artists and the arts.

Then there are collectors. People get into collecting all sorts of things – model trains, commemorative plates, rare vinyl LPs, sports memorabilia – and, like other collectors, art collectors are passionate about trying to hunt down those rare pieces.

Perhaps the most visible form of art collecting today, and the one that drives so much public discussion about art, is the art purchased for millions of dollars – the pieces by Picasso and Damien Hirst traded by the ultrawealthy. This is still social: Whether they’re at Sotheby’s auctions or museum board dinners, wealthy art collectors mingle, meet and talk about who bought what.

Finally, I think many people buy art strictly as an investment, hoping that it will appreciate in value.

Is crypto art really that different?

If you look at the reasons people buy art, only one of them – buying art for your home – has to do with the physical work.

Every other reason for buying art that I listed could apply to crypto art.

You can build your own virtual gallery online and share it with other people online. You can convey your tastes and interests through your virtual gallery and support artists by buying their work. You can participate in a community: Some crypto artists, who have felt excluded by the mainstream art world, say they have found more support in the crypto community and can now earn a living making art.

While Beeple’s big sale made headlines, most crypto art sales are much more affordable, in the tens or hundreds of dollars. This supports a much larger community than just a select few artists. And some resale values have gone up.

Value as a social construct

Aside from the visual pleasure of physical objects, nearly all the value art offers is, in some way, a social construct. This does not mean that art is interchangeable, or that the historical significance and technical skill of a Rembrandt is imaginary. It means that the value we place on these attributes is a choice.

When someone pays USD 90m for a metal balloon animal made by Jeff Koons, it’s hard to believe that the work has that much “intrinsic” value. Even if the materials and craftsmanship are quite good, surely some of those millions are simply buying the right to say “I bought a Koons. And I spent a lot of money on it.” If you just want an artfully made metal balloon animal, there are cheaper ways to get one.

Two people take photographs with their smartphones of a banana taped to a wall.
Maurizio Cattelan’s ‘Comedian’ displayed at Art Basel Miami in 2019. Cindy Ord/Getty Images

Conversely, the conceptual art tradition has long separated the object itself from the value of the work. Maurizio Cattelan sold a banana taped to a wall for six figures, twice; the value of the work was not in the banana or in the duct tape, nor in the way that the two were attached, but in the story and drama around the work. Again, the buyers weren’t really buying a banana, they were buying the right to say they “owned” this artwork.

Depending on your point of view, crypto art could be the ultimate manifestation of conceptual art’s separation of the work of art from any physical object. It is pure conceptual abstraction, applied to ownership.

On the other hand, crypto art could be seen as reducing art to the purest form of buying and selling for conspicuous consumption.

In Victor Pelevin’s satirical novel “Homo Zapiens,” the main character visits an art exhibition where only the names and sale prices of the works are shown. When he says he doesn’t understand – where are the paintings themselves? – it becomes clear that this isn’t the point. Buying and selling is more important than the art.

This story was satire. But crypto art takes this one step further. If the point of ownership is to be able to say you own the work, why bother with anything but a receipt?

Manufacturing scarcity

It still seems hard to get used to the idea of spending money for nothing tangible.

Would anyone pay money for NFTs that say they “own” the Brooklyn Bridge or the whole of the Earth or the concept of love? People can create all the NFTs they want about anything, over and over again. I could make my own NFT claiming that I own the Mona Lisa, and record it to the blockchain, and no one could stop me.

But I think this misses the point.

In crypto art, there is an implicit contract that what you’re buying is unique. The artist makes only one of these tokens, and the one right you get when you buy crypto art is to say that you own that work. No one else can. Note, though, that this is not a legal right, nor is there any enforcement other than social mores. Nonetheless, the value comes from the artist creating scarcity.

This is the same thing that’s happened in the art world ever since photographers and printmakers had to figure out how to sell their work. In the world of photography, a limited-edition print is considered more valuable than an unlimited edition; the fewer prints in the edition, the more valuable they are. Knowing that you have one of a few prints personally made and signed by the artist gives you an emotional connection to the artist that a mass-produced print doesn’t.

This connection could be even weaker in digital art. But what you are buying is still, in part, a connection with the artist. Artists sometimes publicly tweet their thanks to their crypto art patrons, which may strengthen this emotional connection.

A bubble bound to burst?

Personally, I want to buy only art I can hang on my walls, so I have no interest in buying crypto art. There are also environmental costs. Certain blockchains used for crypto art are really bad for the climate, because they require computations that consume staggering amounts of energy.

That said, if buying it right now gives you pleasure – and you enjoy sharing what you’ve bought and the community around it and you’re using a more environmentally friendly blockchain – that’s great.

If you’re buying it for some future reward, however, that’s risky. Will people care about your personal virtual gallery in the future? Will you care? Will crypto art even be a thing in a few years?

As an investment, it just seems inconceivable to me that the higher prices reflect true value, in the sense of these works having higher resale value in the long term. As in the traditional art world, there are a lot more works being sold than could ever possibly be considered significant in a generation’s time.

And, in the crypto world, we’re seeing highly volatile prices, a sudden frenzy of interest, and huge sums being paid for things that seem, on the surface, not to have the slightest bit of value at all, such as the USD 2.5 million bid to “own” Jack Dorsey’s first tweet or even the USD 1,000 bid on a photo of a cease-and-desist letter about NFTs.

Much of this energy seems to be driven by price speculation. It’s also worth noting that the winner of the Beeple auction seems to be heavily invested in the success of crypto art. The cryptocurrencies that drive crypto art are often considered highly speculative.

I have no doubt that, right now, there’s a big NFT bubble.

[Over 100,000 readers rely on The Conversation’s newsletter to understand the world. Sign up today.]

There have been lots of bubbles before – tulips, baseball cards, Beanie Babies – objects that were flying off the shelves one year and then piled up in landfills the next. And, in a bubble, a few headline-making winners get rich, while a whole lot of others lose their shirts. Even if crypto art lasts, maybe the particular artist or platform where you’re buying won’t be popular in the future.

My feelings about crypto art aside, I do believe that art is, fundamentally, a social activity. The more our social lives are lived online, the more it may make sense for some people to have their art collections online, too – whether or not blockchain is involved.The Conversation

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

_____

Learn more:
– NFTs Are Selling for Millions, But How Do You Tell a Diamond From a Dud?
– ‘Traditional’ Art vs. Crypto Art: How to Value It
– Consider These Legal Questions Before Spending Millions on NFTs
– NFT in the Mainstream: Sotheby’s Follows Christie’s with a New Plan
– ‘NFT’ Surpasses ‘Ethereum’ on Google This Week as Trading Balloons
– A Crypto Vanity Dream Now Features Musk, Beeple, Justin Sun, DOGE and NFTs
– Hack Sunday: NFT Theft Follows a Personal Token Attack
– Second-Hand NFT Market for NBA Top Shot Packs Appears on eBay
– Check These 4 Make-Your-Own-NFT Platforms
– Non-Fungible 2021: Prepare Your NFTs For DeFi, Staking, and Sharing

Share122Tweet76Share31
Previous Post

Bitcoin price slides 5% after failing to break $60K — Here's why

Next Post

Updated FATF Crypto Guidelines Still ‘Predicated on Centralized Control’

Related Posts

August PCE Inflation Data: Federal Reserve’s Key Measure Dips, Easing Market Concerns
News

August PCE Inflation Data: Federal Reserve’s Key Measure Dips, Easing Market Concerns

Omer Amsel, Head of Web3 at Fireblocks, on Web2 Companies Moving to Web3, and Crypto Going Mainstream | Ep. 269
News

Omer Amsel, Head of Web3 at Fireblocks, on Web2 Companies Moving to Web3, and Crypto Going Mainstream | Ep. 269

HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu Pumps 27% As Crypto Market Cap Grows 2% While Meme Kombat Presale Tops $120k
News

HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu Pumps 27% As Crypto Market Cap Grows 2% While Meme Kombat Presale Tops $120k

Cogwise is The New AI Crypto Project Providing Traders with Accurate Insights
News

Cogwise is The New AI Crypto Project Providing Traders with Accurate Insights

Kraken Mulls Offering Traditional Stocks and ETFs
News

Kraken Mulls Offering Traditional Stocks and ETFs

Bitcoin Price Jumps 3% to Defy Macro Headwinds, But Bitcoin Minetrix Raises $200,000 and Is the Real Inflation Beater
News

Bitcoin Price Jumps 3% to Defy Macro Headwinds, But Bitcoin Minetrix Raises $200,000 and Is the Real Inflation Beater

ADS SIDE

More News

August PCE Inflation Data: Federal Reserve’s Key Measure Dips, Easing Market Concerns

August PCE Inflation Data: Federal Reserve’s Key Measure Dips, Easing Market Concerns

Omer Amsel, Head of Web3 at Fireblocks, on Web2 Companies Moving to Web3, and Crypto Going Mainstream | Ep. 269

Omer Amsel, Head of Web3 at Fireblocks, on Web2 Companies Moving to Web3, and Crypto Going Mainstream | Ep. 269

HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu Pumps 27% As Crypto Market Cap Grows 2% While Meme Kombat Presale Tops $120k

HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu Pumps 27% As Crypto Market Cap Grows 2% While Meme Kombat Presale Tops $120k

CoinShares says US not lagging in crypto adoption and regulation

CoinShares says US not lagging in crypto adoption and regulation

Cogwise is The New AI Crypto Project Providing Traders with Accurate Insights

Cogwise is The New AI Crypto Project Providing Traders with Accurate Insights

SBI works with UAE’s TradeFinex to set up joint crypto venture in Japan

SBI works with UAE’s TradeFinex to set up joint crypto venture in Japan

Kraken Mulls Offering Traditional Stocks and ETFs

Kraken Mulls Offering Traditional Stocks and ETFs

Bitcoin Price Jumps 3% to Defy Macro Headwinds, But Bitcoin Minetrix Raises $200,000 and Is the Real Inflation Beater

Bitcoin Price Jumps 3% to Defy Macro Headwinds, But Bitcoin Minetrix Raises $200,000 and Is the Real Inflation Beater

Binance Russia buyer tightlipped on owners, denies CZ involvement

Binance Russia buyer tightlipped on owners, denies CZ involvement

Web3 Gaming – Tamadoge Launches Pet Store and Special Anniversary Burn and Giveaway

Web3 Gaming – Tamadoge Launches Pet Store and Special Anniversary Burn and Giveaway

  • Advertise with us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap

© 2020 Copyright - All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Altcoin
  • Bitcoin
  • Blockchain
  • Ethereum
  • Litecoin

© 2020 Copyright - All rights reserved.

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Cookie settingsACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT