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by still_grokking
1473 days ago
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I could have all bored ape pictures and could reproduce them infinitely. What now? How does the NFT thingy stop me from doing that? Actually, one can't even "verify" a NFT if the market side goes down. Because the actual DB isn't on the blockchain… |
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As the grandparent poster alluded to, the history is more important than the image - the same as the fine art and collections world, but technologically enforced in the NFT world. so the transaction hash from the collection contract is more important than the image it accesses, and is way more important than your indefinite reproductions because they won't be in the collection contract. An entry in the bored ape collection contract grants you access to a variety of goods and services. The "NFT thingy" doesn't try to stop you from defrauding undiscerning onlookers or consumers that don't look at the collection contract. The "NFT thingy" prevents you from having programmatic access to gated communities.
> Actually, one can't even "verify" a NFT if the market side goes down. Because the actual DB isn't on the blockchain…
What are you referring to? Did you mean the market site? You don't need OpenSea or any site to verify current possession, prior possession, or metadata. Some styles of NFT's store metadata on their own servers, which can go down. Some styles of NFT's store metadata on more resilient services like IPFS. Some styles of NFT's store metadata on the blockchain directly. All three styles use the blockchain directly for current possession and prior possession.
Which point did you think you were making? I only wrote all that because I didn't know what you were saying specifically.