|
|
|
|
|
by negroni
1655 days ago
|
|
> "Certainly not. The assets are owned by the game developer." It may be the case for Ubisoft. However, some NTFs include the IP rights. For example, if you bought a Bored Ape NFT, you'd have the rights to use that Ape any way that you want. You can license it out for a Cartoon. Movie or Comic Book. Sell T-shirts, etc. |
|
Which surely exists separately from the blockchain in conventional contract law?
An NFT can't "include" IP rights. A notice on a website where you buy it might have a grant of contract rights.
Once again - the blockchain adds nothing or very little in return for a ton of technical complexity.