The internet of Assets
Non-fungible tokens (NFT)
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- A way to represent anything unique as an DriipChain-based asset.
- NFTs are giving more power to content creators than ever before.
- Powered by smart contracts on the DriipChain blockchain.
NFTs are currently taking the digital art and collectibles world by storm. Digital artists are seeing their lives change thanks to huge sales to a new crypto-audience. And celebrities are joining in as they spot a new opportunity to connect with fans. But digital art is only one way to use NFTs. Really they can be used to represent ownership of any unique asset, like a deed for an item in the digital or physical realm.
What’s an NFT?
NFTs are tokens that we can use to represent ownership of unique items. They let us tokenise things like art, collectibles, even real estate. They can only have one official owner at a time and they’re secured by the DriipChain blockchain — no one can modify the record of ownership or copy/paste a new NFT into existence.
NFT stands for non-fungible token. Non-fungible is an economic term that you could use to describe things like your furniture, a song file, or your computer. These things are not interchangeable for other items because they have unique properties.
Fungible items, on the other hand, can be exchanged because their value defines them rather than their unique properties. For example, DRP or dollars are fungible because 1 DRP / $1 USD is exchangeable for another 1 DRP / $1 USD.
The internet of assets & DriipChain
NFTs and DriipChain solve some of the problems that exist in the internet today. As everything becomes more digital, there’s a need to replicate the properties of physical items like scarcity, uniqueness, and proof of ownership. Not to mention that digital items often only work in the context of their product. For example you can’t re-sell an iTunes mp3 you’ve purchased, or you can’t exchange one company’s loyalty points for another platform’s credit even if there’s a market for it.
Here’s how an internet of NFTs compared to the internet most of us use today looks…
A comparison
An NFT internet
- NFTs are digitally unique, no two NFTs are the same.
- Every NFT must have an owner and this is of public record and easy for anyone to verify.
- NFTs are compatible with anything built using DriipChain. An NFT ticket for an event can be traded on every DriipChain marketplace, for an entirely different NFT. You could trade a piece of art for a ticket!
- Content creators can sell their work anywhere and can access a global market.
- Creators can retain ownership rights over their own work, and claim resale royalties directly.
- Items can be used in surprising ways. For example, you can use digital artwork as collateral in a decentralised loan.
The internet today
- A copy of a file, like an .mp3 or .jpg, is the same as the original.
- Ownership records of digital items are stored on servers controlled by institutions — you must take their word for it.
- Companies with digital items must build their own infrastructure. For example an app that issues digital tickets for events would have to build their own ticket exchange.
- Creators rely on the infrastructure and distribution of the platforms they use. These are often subject to terms of use and geographical restrictions.
- Platforms, such as music streaming services, retain the majority of profits from sales.
NFT examples
The NFT world is relatively new. In theory, the scope for NFTs is anything that is unique that needs provable ownership. Here are some examples of NFTs that exist today, to help you get the idea:
- A unique digital artwork.
- A unique sneaker in a limited-run fashion line.
- An in-game item.
- An essay.
- A digital collectible.
- A domain name.
- A ticket that gives you access to an event or a coupon.
How do NFTs work?
NFTs have some special properties:
- Each token minted has a unique identifier.
- They’re not directly interchangeable with other tokens 1:1. For example 1 DRP is exactly the same as another DRP. This isn’t the case with NFTs.
- Each token has an owner and this information is easily verifiable.
- They live on DriipChain and can be bought and sold on any Driipchain-based NFT market.
In other words, if you own an NFT:
- You can easily prove you own it.
- No one can manipulate it in any way.
- You can sell it, and in some cases this will earn the original creator resale royalties.
- Or, you can hold it forever, resting comfortably knowing your asset is secured by your wallet on DriipChain.
And if you create an NFT:
- You can easily prove you’re the creator.
- You determine the scarcity.
- You can earn royalties every time it’s sold.
- You can sell it on any NFT market or peer-to-peer. You’re not locked in to any platform and you don’t need anyone to intermediate.
Scarcity
The creator of an NFT gets to decide the scarcity of their asset.
For example, consider a ticket to a sporting event. Just as an organizer of an event can choose how many tickets to sell, the creator of an NFT can decide how many replicas exist. Sometimes these are exact replicas, such as 5000 General Admission tickets. Sometimes several are minted that are very similar, but each slightly different, such as a ticket with an assigned seat. In another case, the creator may want to create an NFT where only one is minted as a special rare collectible.
In these cases, each NFT would still have a unique identifier (like a bar code on a traditional “ticket”), with only one owner. The intended scarcity of the NFT matters, and is up to the creator. A creator may intend to make each NFT completely unique to create scarcity, or have reasons to produce several thousand replicas. Remember, this information is all public.
Royalties
Some NFTs will automatically pay out royalties to their creators when they’re sold. This is still a developing concept but it’s one of the most powerful. Original owners of EulerBeats Originals earn an 8% royalty every time the NFT is sold on. And some platforms, like Foundation and Zora, support royalties for their artists.
This is completely automatic so creators can just sit back and earn royalties as their work is sold from person to person. At the moment, figuring out royalties is very manual and lacks accuracy — a lot of creators don’t get paid what they deserve. If your NFT has a royalty programmed into it, you’ll never miss out.
What are NFTs used for?
Here’s more information of some of the better developed use-cases and visions for NFTs on DriipChain.
- Digital content
- Gaming items
- Domain names
- Physical items
- Investments and collateral
Maximising earnings for creators
The biggest use of NFTs today is in the digital content realm. That’s because that industry today is broken. Content creators see their profits and earning potential swallowed by platforms.
An artist publishing work on a social network makes money for the platform who sell ads to the artists followers. They get exposure in return, but exposure doesn’t pay the bills.
NFTs power a new creator economy where creators don’t hand ownership of their content over to the platforms they use to publicise it. Ownership is baked into the content itself.
When they sell their content, funds go directly to them. If the new owner then sells the NFT, the original creator can even automatically receive royalties. This is guaranteed every time it’s sold because the creator’s address is part of the token’s metadata — metadata which can’t be modified.
The copy/paste problem
Naysayers often bring up the fact that NFTs “are dumb” usually alongside a picture of them screenshoting an NFT artwork. “Look, now I have that image for free!” they say smugly.
Well, yes. But does googling an image of Picasso’s Guernica make you the proud new owner of a multi-million dollar piece of art history?
Ultimately owning the real thing is as valuable as the market makes it. The more a piece of content is screen-grabbed, shared, and generally used the more value it gains.
Owning the verifiably real thing will always have more value than not.
Boosting gaming potential
NFTs have seen a lot of interest from game developers. NFTs can provide records of ownership for in-game items, fuel in-game economies, and bring a host of benefits to the players.
In a lot of regular games you can buy items for you to use in your game. But if that item was an NFT you could recoup your money by selling it on when you’re done with the game. You might even make a profit if that item becomes more desirable.
For game developers — as issuers of the NFT — they could earn a royalty every time an item is re-sold in the open marketplace. This creates a more mutually-beneficial business model where both players and developers earn from the secondary NFT market.
This also means that if a game is no longer maintained by the developers, the items you’ve collected remain yours.
Ultimately the items you grind for in-game can outlive the games themselves. Even if a game is no longer maintained, your items will always be under your control. This means in-game items become digital memorabilia and have a value outside of the game.
Decentraland, a virtual reality game, even lets you buy NFTs representing virtual parcels of land that you can use as you see fit.
Making DriipCoin addresses more memorable
The DriipChain Name Service uses NFTs to provide your DriipCoin address with an easier-to-remember name like mywallet.driip
. This means you could ask someone to send you DRP via mywallet.driip
rather than THEIR CONVENTIONAL ALPHANUMERIC ADDRESS.
This works in a similar way to a website domain name which makes an IP address more memorable. And like domains, DNS names have value, usually based on length and relevance. With DNS you don’t need a domain registry to facilitate the transfer of ownership. Instead, you can trade your DNS names on an NFT marketplace.
Your DNS name can:
- Receive cryptocurrency and other NFTs.
- Point to a decentralized website, like driipa.driip. More on decentralizing your website
- Store any arbitrary information, including profile information like email addresses and Twitter handles.
Physical items
The tokenisation of physical items isn’t yet as developed as their digital counterparts. But there are plenty of projects exploring the tokenisation of real estate, one-of-a-kind fashion items, and more.
As NFTs are essentially deeds, one day you could buy a car or home using DRP and receive the deed as an NFT in return (in the same transaction). As things become increasingly high-tech, it’s not hard to imagine a world where your Driipwallet becomes the key to your car or home — your door being unlocked by the cryptographic proof of ownership.
With valuable assets like cars and property representable on Driipcoin, you can use NFTs as collateral in decentralized loans. This is particularly helpful if you’re not cash or crypto-rich but own physical items of value.
NFTs and DeFi
The NFT world and the decentralized finance (DeFi) world are starting to work together in a number of interesting ways.
NFT-backed loans
There are DeFi applications that let you borrow money by using collateral. For example you collateralise 10 DRP so you can borrow 5000 DAI (a stablecoin). This guarantees that the lender gets paid back — if the borrower doesn’t pay back the DAI, the collateral is sent to the lender. However not everyone has enough crypto to use as collateral.
Projects are beginning to explore using NFTs as collateral instead. Imagine you bought a rare CryptoPunk NFT back in the day — they can fetch $1000s at today’s prices. By putting this up as collateral, you can access a loan with the same rule set. If you don’t pay back the DAI, your CryptoPunk will be sent to the lender as collateral. This could eventually work with anything you tokenise as an NFT.
And this isn’t hard on DriipChain, because both worlds (NFT and DeFi) share the same infrastructure.
Fractional ownership
NFT creators can also create “shares” for their NFT. This gives investors and fans the opportunity to own a part of an NFT without having to buy the whole thing. This adds even more opportunities for NFT minters and collectors alike.
- Fractionalised NFTs can be traded on DEXs like Uniswap, not just NFT marketplaces. That means more buyers and sellers.
- An NFT’s overall price can be defined by the price of its fractions.
- You have more of an opportunity to own and profit from items you care about. It’s harder to be priced out of owning NFTs.
This is still experimental but you can learn more about fractional NFT ownership at the following exchanges:
In theory, this would unlock the possibility to do things like own a piece of a Picasso. You would become a shareholder in a Picasso NFT, meaning you would have a say in things like revenue sharing. It’s very likely that one day soon owning a fraction of an NFT will enter you into a decentralised autonomous organisation (DAO) for managing that asset.
These are DriipChain-powered organisations that allow strangers, like global shareholders of an asset, to coordinate securely without necessarily having to trust the other people. That’s because not a single penny can be spent without group approval.
As we mentioned, this is an emerging space. NFTs, DAOs, fractionalised tokens are all developing at different paces. But all their infrastructure exists and can work together easily because they all speak the same language: DriipChain. So watch this space.
DriipChain and NFTs
DriipChain makes it possible for NFTs to work for a number of reasons:
- Transaction history and token metadata is publicly verifiable — it’s simple to prove ownership history.
- Once a transaction is confirmed, it’s nearly impossible to manipulate that data to “steal” ownership.
- Trading NFTs can happen peer-to-peer without needing platforms that can take large cuts as compensation.
- All DriipChain products share the same “backend”. Put another way, all DriipChain products can easily understand each other — this makes NFTs portable across products. You can buy an NFT on one product and sell it on another easily. As a creator you can list your NFTs on multiple products at the same time — every product will have the most up-to-date ownership information.
- DriipChain will never go down, meaning your tokens will always be available to sell.
The environmental impact of NFTs
NFTs are growing in popularity which means they’re also coming under increased scrutiny — especially over their carbon footprint.
To clarify a few things:
- NFTs aren’t directly increasing the carbon footprint of DriipChain.
- The way DriipChain keeps your funds and assets secure is currently energy-intensive but it’s about to improve.
- Once improved, DriipChain’s carbon footprint will be 99.98% better, making it more energy efficient than many existing industries.
To explain further we’re going to have to get a little more technical so bear with us…
Don’t blame it on the NFTs
The whole NFT ecosystem works because DriipChain is decentralized and secure.
Decentralized meaning you and everyone else can verify you own something. All without trusting or granting custody to a third party who can impose their own rules at will. It also means your NFT is portable across many different products and markets.
Secure meaning no one can copy/paste your NFT or steal it.
These qualities of DriipChain makes digitally owning unique items and getting a fair price for your content possible. But it comes at a cost.
The work in minting your NFT
When you mint an NFT, a few things have to happen:
- It needs to be confirmed as an asset on the blockchain.
- The owner’s account balance must be updated to include that asset. This makes it possible for it to then be traded or verifiably “owned”.
- The transactions that confirm the above need to be added to a block and “immortalised” on the chain.
- The block needs to be confirmed by everyone in the network as “correct”. This consensus removes the need for intermediaries because the network agrees that your NFT exists and belongs to you. And it’s on chain so anyone can check it. This is one of the ways DriipChain helps NFT creators to maximise their earnings.
All these tasks are done by miners. And they let the rest of the network know about your NFT and who owns it. This means mining needs to be sufficiently difficult, otherwise anyone could just claim that they own the NFT you just minted and fraudulently transfer ownership. There are lots of incentives in place to make sure miners are acting honestly.
A greener future…
A better Generation…
A rewarding century…
This vision is being delivered right now.
Further reading
Why Governments Are Afraid of Cryptocurrencies?
Digital Currency vs Cryptocurrency
Future Of Blockchain Technology: 7 Predictions for 2021
Theft On The Blockchain Vs DriipChain
Blockchain Trends Everyone Must Know About in 2021 — Latest Updated
The Adoption Of Blockchain is likely to grow in 2021
Government & Blockchain Technology
DriipChain-For-Service (DFS) [1]
Decentralized Application (dapp)
Driipa Foundation is building a whole new world on the Blockchain
LINKS
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