The way I read the article, the “worth millions” is the sum of the ransom demand.

The funny part is that the exploit is in the “smart” contract, ya know the thing that the blockchain keeps secure by forbidding any updates or patches.

        • IWantToFuckSpez@kbin.social
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          Love how the NFT hype was a big wealth transfer event. So many rich people, like wealthy oil Arabs, bought into the scam and moved so much money into artists pockets while they essentially got nothing in return.

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            Is there any way to confirm this? Or are there examples of artists who made a significant amount of money from NFTs? I understand its potential benefit for artists, but I mostly remember already-rich corporations (e.g. UFC) using them as another way to extract money from consumers.

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              There are curated NFT auction sites where only selected artists are allowed to sell their work. And you can see for how much they sell their pieces. During the hype many sold items for thousands to tens of thousands or more. Also there is Beeple who rode the hype early from the start and he became a millionaire.

          • merc@sh.itjust.works
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            That’s not really what happened. Some people who had invested in companies that would make money if NFTs went up in value chummed the waters by buying NFTs for huge amounts, convincing a lot of people that NFTs were going to be great investments. Then celebrities with an interest in the scheme pumped up the value too.

            That convinced a lot of idiots to “invest” in NFTs, then eventually the bottom fell out of the market.

            As for artists, some made some money, but most of the money went into shit like “bored apes” which were algorithmically generated.

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            6 months ago

            My favorite is Murakami, who after selling NFTs he made paintings after all all of them. So which one is the “original”? The actual physical painting, or the digital NFT?

            • yeather@lemmy.ca
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              Technically, the NFT. In reality, the physical. Is a lot harder to brag about your art assets if you have to log into your pc to show them off.

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          I do see potential use for them, but not in the way they are currently being used. I could see uses like door keys, tickets, memberships, etc being of practical value, but not stupid little pictures.

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              Besides the obvious of your door lock needing to be connected to the internet, and that could be a problem, what else do you see as being an issue with using it for door keys?

              • logan_berries@lemmy.world
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                Another question is: why would you need it for a key?

                Long-established public/private keys and signatures are used in this way all the time to control access to servers around the world. No blockchain needed. Blockchain is helpful when we all need to agree on a series of events.

                Homes are a nice example of where you can have an isolated system which knows what it needs to about you (e.g. a public key) without sharing or cross-checking anything with the world.

              • bahbah23@lemmy.world
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                How exactly would that work? Keep in mind that the blockchain is by necessity not secret.

                • shortwavesurfer@monero.town
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                  Right, but all the lock is doing is checking whether you own the NFT or not. If your house was in NFT, people could see that you bought a house, but not where it was as long as it was generic like house #40000

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            I thought of it as a good way for artists to earn a living by more tokenized artworks, but then it gets hijacked by this shit.

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            Just like with everything else, all those things you suggested are already done much more reliably without NFTs.

            If you still want to see a more “pratical” use of it, look no further than Decentraland, where it’s used as “ownership” of digital “land” and other “goods”.

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            I think of it like timeshare values. They’re really high …. Until you try to find someone who will actually buy it

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              The person talking out of their ass is voted up.

              The person bringing up facts is voted down.

              The person posting dismissive nonsense is voted up.

              Gross.

              • AbidanYre@lemmy.world
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                6 months ago

                The only person providing any sources here would put that $5.5b market cap (if it’s accurate) at 1/4 of what it was two years ago.

                That’s one hell of a crash and burn.

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                What is a supposed fact without a source?

                I too can make up facts like that.

          • Womble@lemmy.world
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            The vast majority of NFTs are worthless now

            “MacContract on Ethereum has a floor price of $13,234,204.2, but its all-time sales is only $18,” the report said, adding: “This stark discrepancy between listed floor prices and actual sales data exposes a significant issue in the NFT market – inflated valuations that don’t reflect genuine buyer interest or real-world transactions.

            “It becomes clear that a significant portion of the NFT market is characterized by speculative and hopeful pricing strategies that are far removed from the actual trading history of these assets,” it said.

            And this is a report from a crypto website with a vested interest in pretending crypto has uses.

            • merc@sh.itjust.works
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              Those are the transactions that are actually happening.

              I’m sure there are lots of transactions that aren’t happening because people have given up, and decided that a 99.9% loss in value is basically a 100% loss in value, so they’ve just walked away.

            • CaptainSpaceman@lemmy.world
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              Its hard to be definitive, especially from one data point, but theres no doubt that lots of NFTs are just copycats trying to ride the coattails of other succesful projects, and end up flooding the market with garbage.

              But that doesnt mean all projects are garbage, nor that the tech is bad or unutilized.

              I had a feeling id get flamed by even mentioning NFTs, so im not surprised a the downvotes or derision. Anyways, have a good one 😃

        • CaptainSpaceman@lemmy.world
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          Better than the current money laundering techniques? Using art appraisals to inflate assets and move dirty money, or straight up using banks like Deutsche or Credit Suisse (RIP) to move dirty money?

          • kautau@lemmy.world
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            I mean yeah, it’s better to launder money using a difficult to trace digital ledger. But no, the things you mentioned won’t go away, because there’s also money in the laundering, and double dipping is the name of the game

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          Mmm, considering NFTs are all on transparent blockchains, I don’t know that I would choose that particular method to accomplish that.

          • Starbuck@lemmy.world
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            The transparency is the feature that makes it great. I can buy drugs or whatever, and exchange you buy an NFT from me of equal value. Now when the bank comes and says “where did this >$15k transaction come from?” I can point to the blockchain and say that I sold my fancy monkey pic.

            This has been a thing in the physical art world for a while, https://complyadvantage.com/insights/art-money-laundering/, this just made it easier.

            • shortwavesurfer@monero.town
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              Yeah, I know it’s happened for a while, but my big question would be why are you having to put your money back in the bank instead of leaving it on a blockchain such as Monero. The dollar is about the biggest scam around along with all other government fiat currencies.

              • Starbuck@lemmy.world
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                Because sometimes even criminals need to buy things that aren’t illegal, I guess. And the legitimate people who have those things don’t want to play games dealing with fake internet money.

                If I want to buy a jetski, the place I buy it from isn’t going to take crypto because the people that sell the parts for it don’t take crypto and the people who build it can’t pay for food in crypto.

                Crypto is only useful for rug pull scams, money laundering, and black-market transactions. It’s real innovation is undoing centuries of banking regulations so that people can learn the hard way why all those regulations exist.

                • merc@sh.itjust.works
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                  Because sometimes even criminals need to buy things that aren’t illegal

                  Money has value basically because people need to pay taxes. The shop owner sells things for Euros or USD partially because eventually at the end of the year they need to turn over Euros or USD to the government as taxes. If they sold things for bitcoins, they’d eventually have to convert those bitcoins to USD to pay taxes.

                  Other than speculation, the only reason bitcoin has any value is that sometimes people need to pay ransomware ransoms. That means they need to buy bitcoin somehow. And, even the criminals who receive that bitcoin will launder it and change it back into real assets because it’s not useful to them as bitcoin. Eliminate ransomware and suddenly the only value for bitcoin is people who hold it hoping there’s a greater fool out there who will buy it from them for more than they paid.

                • shortwavesurfer@monero.town
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                  For now, sure. However, i will say that i have been buying food woth crypto for over a year now and havent starved yet. And if i wanted a jetski and wanted to pay in crypto i could do so. Fundamentally, crypto and banking are two totally different things because with a bank somebody holds your money. With crypto, you hold your money.

              • Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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                6 months ago

                why are you having to put your money back in the bank instead of leaving it on a blockchain such as Monero.

                Because my mortgage company, supermarket and power company only take real money.

                • shortwavesurfer@monero.town
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                  The mortgage I could see being a problem. As for groceries and power, I can pay for those with crypto.

              • ElectroNeutrino@lemmy.world
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                Good and services are still primarily purchased with fiat in most of the world. You need to be able to actually use it for it to be useful, so whether or not blockchain is theoretically better doesn’t matter there if there isn’t wide enough adoption.

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                  True, thanks to the internet if the good is not immediately available in my local area for crypto i can order it online and have it delivered. Depending on exactly what the service is makes that an option too.

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                Hahahahahahaha!

                I’m being serious when I say this: you don’t understand what you’re talking about. I know that’s dismissive, and I’m sorry.

      • MonkderZweite@feddit.ch
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        Those who buy art and pack it in a safe until it’s worth more?

        Im glad that doesn’t work as well in digital.

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      People buy them for millions or their value would not be in the millions

      • Andy@slrpnk.net
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        First, DO people buy them for millions, in the present tense? I know that people did in the past, but I thought the price on most of these took a huge hit.

        Second: do people BUY them for millions, in the sense that they trade things of well-measured value (like fiat currency or gold) for coins to buy these? Or do they buy them for millions of dollars in equivalent coins that they already have, and don’t want to actually sell for real goods or money because they’d realized huge losses if they actually cashed out, so they have to keep them circulating within the blockchain to maintain a hope that they’ll return anywhere near their previous value? Because if you have 10 million dollars worth of etherium that you bought at 20 million and an NFT of questionable value, can’t you just buy and sell it to a few wallets you own to make it look like it’s recently been purchased for a few million to create the illusion of value without actually ever giving or receiving anything?

        • xep@kbin.social
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          I’ll get my friend to buy it from me for millions, then he can give the money back to me and when it sells again, we can split the profit. It’s win-win!

        • SCB@lemmy.world
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          This seems like kind of a meaningless distinction when the comment was speaking about the relative value of these. How some pays is irrelevant.

          This feels like you’re trying to shit on them so just refuse to believe that the concept of value has any meaning. Things are worth whatever someone will pay for them.

          That doesn’t make the people willing to pay for it smart.

          • Andy@slrpnk.net
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            I’m sorry it feels that way, that’s not my intention.

            I think it’s a meaningful distinction because my understanding is that many large matter holders are early adopters who acquired coins at at basement prices that them became highly valued when crypto took off. These people, as I understand it, have a different spending pattern than we associate with conventional wealth. They may shuffle their coins between digital assets with limited conversion into real world good and services, because inside the block chain they’re billionaires, but if they tried to buy a house or a vacation they’re forced to find buyers at prices that are reflective of the value among crypto holders, but not nearly as high to those outside the system who they’d need to complete cash transactions.

          • TheHarpyEagle@lemmy.world
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            The distinction isn’t meaningless, it’s actually vitally important. The thing is, we’ve been here before, hundreds if not thousands of times, with the stock market and other speculative bubbles. Once a big enough entity decides to cut their losses and bail with whatever they can get, all that “value” disappears and there’s no inherent value of the asset itself to fall back on. So it has been with other crypto crashes in the past few years.

            Granted, this is generally true of fiat as well, we just have a lot more people and hopefully some safeguards and, vitally, an active economy holding up that value.

            • SCB@lemmy.world
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              All art is inherently without value, and it’s value is entirely speculative.

              I think NFTs are dumb as fuck, but they’re worth what people will pay for them. Same shit with tulips in Denmark famously spiking - bubble or not, things are literally worth what someone will pay

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        No, and that is exactly the problem.

        They artificially inflate the price to make it seem more worth than it actually is.

        It is a type of fraud

        • SCB@lemmy.world
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          Things are worth what people will pay. People pay out the nose for diamonds and they are just shiny rocks and not particularly rare.

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    Sounds like a great way to make an insurance claim on a bunch of NFTs worth “millions” that you could not convince anyone to buy.

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          You can in fact insure things that it is possible to steal. Cars, bikes, household posessions, you name it. It’s quite common.

          • ForgotAboutDre@lemmy.world
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            If the insurance company thinks the nft can’t be stolen, it’s money for no risk. That’s why they would easily accept insuring an nft.

            I think you misunderstood my comment.

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            In a highly simplified way: total risk of insuring from theft is roughly other-risks * theft-risk, so if theft risk is 0, it means that other risks, such as insanelly high risks in asset valuation are irrelevant to the total risk which will always end up as 0.

            So it makes sense that being paid to insure that which cannot be stollen against theft is risk-free money quite independently of all else. (Of curse, if something has a non-zero probability - even if tiny - of being stolen none of that holds)

            I think that’s the whole humourous point the previous poster was making: that which NFT promoters kept on telling us guarantees unique ownership which cannot be taken by others (and hence cannot be stollen) turns out that it can.

      • Dr. Coomer@lemmy.world
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        Then what would you do with it? Is it purely for clout? “Hey guys, look, I got an image of this monkey.” Yes monkeys are amazing, but you don’t even own the picture, so what’s the point?

        • deft@ttrpg.network
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          I mean low key it’s supposed to be a receipt that can’t be copied. The receipt being slapped onto an image is what most associated with NFTs but it’s more just like a code that provides proof of purchase/ownership because you can trace the history on the block chain

          • merc@sh.itjust.works
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            Except more like a star registry because there’s nothing to say you actually own the image. Other people on other blockchains might also claim that they own the image. Other people on the same blockchain might also claim the exact same image, just at a different URL.

          • Traister101@lemmy.today
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            It’s a receipt with a link to an image. The image is entirely unrelated to the NFT outside of the link that’s embedded into the NFT. It’s kinda like how you can embed an image from one website onto another separate unrelated website

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            The rub here being that you really only own the receipt, it doesn’t confer any legal rights or ensure exclusivity of the content it’s attached to. I get why people uninterested in being part of a PNG are excited about them, but I haven’t personally seen a use case for them that isn’t exploitable or already solved by current technology.

            • deft@ttrpg.network
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              Back with GameStop the hope was the ability to sell/trade digital content like games. Because you actually own the digital content and the proof of purchase, closest to digital ownership I’ve seen.

              PlayStation out here taking games after people bought them and shit is a strong reason for NFTs imo

              • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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                How would NFTs make any difference for Sony losing rights to a game and removing it from their servers? They still know who purchased it from their own records but still removed access entirely.

                • deft@ttrpg.network
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                  That’s not what’s being said here. Not Sony losing rights to a game, just entirely being unable to provide proof of ownership on digital content.

                  I’ve had Microsoft do this to me for Minecraft during their transition to owning it where they claimed I didn’t own the game. I had to legitimately email them a picture of a receipt I owned to get my account back. Had I not had that receipt I’d not have the game.

                  I’ve never had Sony do this but I hear they’ve done this exact thing to people in other ways usually DLCs.

                  With NFTs there’s a third party undeniable proof of purchase and ownership. It takes that whole side away from the distributor giving power to the consumer.

                  In a better world I could then sell that NFT and proof of purchase and the company would honor it for the person I sold it to allowing for the resale of digital content.

    • Lanusensei87@lemmy.world
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      You very much do own an NFT you purchase, what you don’t own is the asset the NFT represents (the shitty RNG generated monkey for example).

  • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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    Another interpretation is that it’s all an insurance scam were something worthless is “stolen by hackers” and then claimed to be worth millions for the insurance claim.

    But surely nobody in the “well known as impeccably honest” NFT world would ever do something like that!

  • crashoverride@lemmy.world
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    Think of it like this, when people make drug busts and they find huge amounts of cocaine or whatever and they say oh this is 300 something mod a million is worth of stuff. No it’s not. It’s maybe like not even half that not even a quarter of that, they just make it up just to make their bust even bigger

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      I remember it used to be calculated on the lowest value extrapolated out so a gram of smoke was 20/25 bucks so a kilo of smoke “had a street value of 20,000 - 25,000.”

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      I also like the “10 Kilos of product was taken off of the street” which means like 12 grams of weed was turned into brownies

  • Cyber Yuki@lemmy.world
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    “Potential losses”. I get the feeling that NFT owners got bit by the same bug that bit RIAA executives.

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    ITT: a handful of people starting to sweat about their NFT retirement strategy

  • Margot Robbie@lemmy.world
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    One of the great thing about the AI revolution is that since generating infinite number of unique random (and commonly, bad) pictures of literally anything you can think of takes only seconds, the entire concept of NFT has become completely worthless as it completely destroyed the value-from-scarcity argument. Not that it ever was a good argument to begin with.

    • kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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      And why should any sane person care if you did?

      It’s a digital file. Copies are exactly the same as the original.

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    I’m having difficulty with the word “worth”. It appears to be doing an awful lot of heavy lifting

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    Just because the suckers that bought them paid millions doesn’t mean that the NFTs are worth millions.