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by Judgmentality
1905 days ago
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This is also my understanding, and my point was (in this example) Jack Dorsey can just do it a second time, and a third time, and so on. And it's not like Monet making more paintings, because each painting is unique. This is an identical digital copy from the same person, with no guarantee of its longevity. |
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- An NFT can (should) include a hash of the work
- Multiple NFTs can exist pointing to the same hash.
However:
> And it's not like Monet making more paintings, because each painting is unique.
Each NFT is also unique in the sense that each NFT itself has an address and its own history. They are distinguishable. They are orderable.
> This is an identical digital copy from the same person, with no guarantee of its longevity.
The record has a guaranteed longevity - the longevity of the underlying blockchain. The object it points to obviously does not.
However that's not really important. Building records in the city clerk office have a guaranteed longevity that is far greater than the buildings themselves.
So for example, if Jack minted multiple NFTs for the same tweet it would be clear to everyone which one was first. Only the first one would presumably be considered valuable.
If Jack attached IP rights to those NFTs, courts would presumably only consider the first valid.
I personally find NFTs that lack actual legal property rights to be silly and valueless, but I wanted to address confusion about how they actually work.