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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: August 3rd, 2023

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  • It’s not even that.

    There is a huge lack of insight into who owns the copyright of an NFT. This confusion likely stems from the fact that an NFT comprises two things: (i) the identifiable, non-fungible, non-replicable, and transferrable cryptographic asset recorded on the blockchain, and (ii) the creative content. The creative content is separate and distinct from the actual asset recorded on the blockchain. As such, the person or entity that created the creative content owns the copyright. The content creator continues to own the copyright, even if the NFT is sold to someone else. It’s analogous to Jeff Koons selling artwork he created—Koons can sell the art to one person to hang on their wall, but since Jeff also owns the copyright, he can sell that same artwork as an image on t-shirts.

    https://bpp.msu.edu/magazine/nfts-what-you-need-to-know-to-protect-copyrights-june2022/

    NFTs are literally just URLs, pointlessly stored on “the blockchain”. URLs that point to servers which can be switched off at any moment.










  • Logic

    Please explain your reasoning.

    Others have done this and you seem to be ignoring them, so not sure what the point of you asking is.

    Go look at some of the code that AI is powered by. It’s just parameters. Lots and lots of parameters. Then the output from that is inevitable.

    For the same reason I can’t get a date with Michelle Ryan: it’s a physical impossibility.

    Huh?

    If you’re too lazy to even look up the most basic thing you don’t understand, then I guess we’re done here.