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The Watercooler
NFTs: I just don't understand
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<blockquote data-quote="amplify" data-source="post: 2344499" data-attributes="member: 130638"><p>This is a false equivalence fallacy.</p><p></p><p>For starters, market.com is one name and market.online is another. They can both independently work and coexist together, achieving the same goal or being completely separate services.</p><p></p><p></p><p>And, to which, you still can.</p><p></p><p>To my knowledge, the owner of BAYC Apes has commercial rights with ownership. You could reach out to an owner and ask $50 to authorize a 24"x24" canvas print to hang in your coffee shop, with you taking the JPEG on down to the print shop to be done.</p><p></p><p>You wouldn't own the $50,000 ape, but if ape drawings are your thing, it could make a nice wall piece for considerably less.</p><p></p><p>To top this whole thing off, the Apes were dropped for a lot less money than they're selling for now. The original authors aren't collecting the great sums of money, regular people passing the NFTs on to what I believe to be the next sucker in line is. So, you're not really supporting the artists anymore, if you can call randomly generated images art, except being a marketing tool for Bored Ape Jet Club, Bored Ape Golfer Club, etc., while concurrently diluting your investment.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="amplify, post: 2344499, member: 130638"] This is a false equivalence fallacy. For starters, market.com is one name and market.online is another. They can both independently work and coexist together, achieving the same goal or being completely separate services. And, to which, you still can. To my knowledge, the owner of BAYC Apes has commercial rights with ownership. You could reach out to an owner and ask $50 to authorize a 24"x24" canvas print to hang in your coffee shop, with you taking the JPEG on down to the print shop to be done. You wouldn't own the $50,000 ape, but if ape drawings are your thing, it could make a nice wall piece for considerably less. To top this whole thing off, the Apes were dropped for a lot less money than they're selling for now. The original authors aren't collecting the great sums of money, regular people passing the NFTs on to what I believe to be the next sucker in line is. So, you're not really supporting the artists anymore, if you can call randomly generated images art, except being a marketing tool for Bored Ape Jet Club, Bored Ape Golfer Club, etc., while concurrently diluting your investment. [/QUOTE]
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NFTs: I just don't understand
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