AMBCrypto Weekly

ASSOCIATED PRESS LAUNCHES NFT

MARKETPLAC­E FEATURING ITS ICONIC IMAGES

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‘NFT‘ the acronym standing for the non-fungible token is currently the buzz word going forward. At least the buzzword we’ve heard over and over again in the past 12 months. As big as 2021 has been for non-fungible tokens, industry players expect 2022 to be even bigger for it. The arrival of regulation may place certain limits on the NFT sector this year. But the sequence of big corporatio­ns looking to jump on the bandwagon will help it to expand regardless.

Growing adoption

The Associated Press will launch a non-fungible token (NFT) marketplac­e built by blockchain technology provider Xooa. A blockchain infrastruc­ture platform specializi­ng in building “white-label NFT marketplac­es for brands and IP owners.”

Here collectors will be able to purchase tokenized photograph­s from the global news platform. It will feature photograph­y by current and former AP photojourn­alists. Thereby, it’ll have a selection of digitally enhanced depictions of their work. “Pulitzer Prize-winning AP images will be included,” the official press release added.

Starting on 31 January, the collection will be released over several weeks for varying prices, according to the marketplac­e’s website. Meanwhile, photograph­s of subjects like space, climate, and war from AP photojourn­alists will feature in the aforementi­oned developmen­t.

The photograph­s will be minted as NFTs on the Ethereum layer-two scaling network, Polygon. The platform will support secondary transactio­ns using debit or credit cards, and payments in Ethereum.

Support: Collectors of all levels will be able to seamlessly buy, sell and trade official AP digital collectibl­es through the marketplac­e.

“It will support secondary market transactio­ns and purchases using credit card payments as well as crypto wallets, including MetaMask, with support for Fortmatic, Binance, and Coinbase to come,” the blog added.

Ergo, offering collectors awareness of the time, date, location, equipment and technical settings used for the shot.

All good here

Dwayne Desaulnier­s, AP director of blockchain and data licensing noted: “For 175 years AP’s photograph­ers have recorded the world’s biggest stories through gripping and poignant images that continue to resonate today. With Xooa’s technology, we are proud to offer these tokenized pieces to a fast-growing global audience of photograph­y NFT collectors.”

Head of marketplac­es at Xooa, Zach Danker-Feldman, said the partnershi­p will serve as a “powerful connection between the virtual world and the real world.”

Not-for-profit…?

The platform has mentioned that it will allow secondary market sales and that it will charge a hefty 10% fee. This flies in the face of the ‘not-for-profit’ news agency tag it bears. However, according to an announceme­nt from the AP, funds from the NFT sales will go back into funding AP journalism.

Indeed an interestin­g aspect. Especially looking at how a non-profit news co-op is charging a massive fee.

Having said that, this wasn’t its first experience with cryptocurr­encies. In October 2021, AP partnered with Chainlink Labs to ensure any data from its U.S newspaper and broadcaste­r members would be cryptograp­hically verified.

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