Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

What’s this craze for ‘NFTs’?

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A digital art piece, tweaked using cryptocurr­ency technology to make it one-of-a-kind, sold at auction this week for nearly $70 million. That transactio­n made global headlines and buoyed already-mushroomin­g interest in these kinds of digital objects — known as non-fungible tokens, or NFTs — that have captured the attention of artists and collectors alike.

In economics jargon, a fungible token is an asset that can be exchanged on a one-for-one basis. Think of dollars or bitcoins — each one has the exact same value and can be traded freely. A nonfungibl­e object, by contrast, has its own distinct value, like an old house or a classic car.

Cross this notion with cryptocurr­ency technology known as the blockchain and you get NFTs. These are effectivel­y digital certificat­es of authentici­ty

that can be attached to digital art or, well, pretty much anything else that comes in digital form — audio files, video clips, animated stickers, this article you’re reading.

NFTs confirm an item’s ownership by recording the details on a digital ledger known as a blockchain, which is public and stored on computers across the internet, making it effectivel­y impossible to lose or destroy.

At the moment, these tokens are white-hot in the collecting world, where they’re being used to solve a problem central to digital collectibl­es: how to claim ownership of something that can be easily and endlessly duplicated.

Sure, anyone can download a copy of Beeple’s art from his social media feed, print it out, and hang it on the wall. Just like you can take a photo of the Mona Lisa in the Louvre or buy a print from the museum gift shop. But that doesn’t mean you own those original artworks.

One purpose of NFTs is that they can be used to trace an object’s digital provenance, allowing a select few to prove ownership. In the broader picture, it’s a

way to create scarcity — albeit artificial — so that you can sell something for higher prices thanks to its scarcity.

“All the time, money and effort you spend in your digital life, you can create value for that,“said Chicago fund manager Andrew Steinwold, who started an NFT fund in 2019. “You have property rights in the physical world. Why don’t we have property rights in the digital world?“

Some NFT issuers give full copyrights to the buyer, though others do not.

Beeple is an American digital artist based in South Carolina whose real name is Mike Winkelmann. He’s been creating digital sketches using 3D tools on a daily basis for the past 13 years. Auction house Christie’s calls his work “abstract, fantastica­l, grotesque or absurd.“He has 1.9 million followers on Instagram.

In December, the first extensive auction of his art brought in $3.5 million, an eye-catching amount that was surpassed by this week’s record-shattering sale of his collage “Everydays: The First 5,000 Days“for nearly $70 million, paid in a digital currency known as Ethereum.

Digital artist Anne Spalter started out as an NFT skeptic but has now sold multiple artworks using the tokens.

“NFTs have opened up art to a whole bunch of people who never would have gone to a gallery in New York,” said Spalter, who pioneered digital fine arts courses at Brown University and the Rhode Island School of Design in the 1990s. “They’re investors, they’re tech entreprene­urs, they’re in that world.”

 ?? Lea Suzuki / The San Francisco Chronicle ?? Mixed media artist Göksu Ilgaz Koçakcigil­l, also known as @skywaterr, with works of her digital art displayed on her laptop and tablet in her studio on Friday in San Francisco, Calif.
Lea Suzuki / The San Francisco Chronicle Mixed media artist Göksu Ilgaz Koçakcigil­l, also known as @skywaterr, with works of her digital art displayed on her laptop and tablet in her studio on Friday in San Francisco, Calif.

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