I Bought my First NFT, Not for the Reason You Might Think

Paul O'Brien
8 min readSep 27, 2021

--

It’s difficult today, online, if you’re paying any attention all to cryptocurrency or media innovation, to not have heard “NFT”

A .gif of Nyan Cat sold for lots and lots (and lots) of money as an NFT. These things have interest near hype from Nike, Visa, Warner Music Group, and Nike. Time Magazine’s recently sold 4,500 TIMEPieces in one minute and Tiger Woods recently sold NFTs on Autograph through a marketplace from DraftKings; Autograph, co-founded by Tom Brady, also has Wayne Gretzky, Naomi Osaka, and Tony Hawk prepping a release of digital collectibles.

I’m the first to admit since I’ve worked online since the ’90s, that while I’m more introduced to NFTs than most, I have been a detractor and pessimist about the idea, and the early enthusiasm for NFTs certainly didn’t do anything to change my opinion. I can buy an autographed internet im age??

Let me explain, starting with an introduction to NFTs drawn from my frustration that the industry is doing a terrible job of describing these things.

What is an NFT?

Sold as an NFT for $172,000 - Learn a lot more about NFTs here

“NFT” stands for Non Fungible Token. Which, if you ask me, is another bunch of buzzwords meant to explain a buzzword.

Fungible refers to how something is essentially interchangeable and how each of its parts is indistinguishable from another part — a computer, for example, is fungible because we an swap out the components or because you can just replace your Dell laptop with another of the same kind. Well an NFT is Non Fungible — and so now you have my attention, this digital file that traditionally is easily copied and shared, might not be; that has implications.

A Token is an encrypted file, if you will, that exists on the blockchain (we’ll save that description for another time) such that it cannot be replicated.

And there is where my brain starts to “ a ha!” that even though the digital image collected could be copied, there’s something more to it that makes it unique.

Tokens, on the internet, are transparent, programmable, permissionless, and trustless; which is a series of statements that frankly, went from valuable and exciting to questionable ( trustless??), so let’s break that down:

  • Transparent means that information associated with token is viewable and verifiable — that, rules, code, or direction, associated with it, can be affirmed by everyone.
  • Programmable means what you might think, that a token can run code. Literally as it sounds, a token can be software, an app, or even game. The rules and direction in that program, is referred to as a “smart contract,” in that it can outline rules of engagement — again rather literally, like an actual contract that you sign.
  • Permissionless means that anyone can participate in what tokens are and do, without needing to register or have an account; you don’t need permission to have one, or transfer it, or destroy it.
  • Trustless means that no one central authority controls the system; instead it runs on the rules predefined by the network protocol. And finally,

On top of all that, since the token is programmable, non fungible, and created on the blockchain, all the talk you hear about cryptocurrency (i.e. BitCoin) means that the the file holds can hold value and be exchanged — retaining and transferring the value and an immutable and verifiable record of the transaction.

So it’s NOT just the a digital image that someone considers collectible and thus more valuable because of it, NFTs can be created for anything you might conceive of that needs an immutable and verifiable record of the transaction AND code that could exist as a file or application of any kind. Let me give you some examples:

  • A social media post, a tweet, could be turned into an NFT. Perhaps the post is an original quote or comes from someone famous and people would like to own or value what was said.
  • A book could be published, digitally (online) as an NFT, retaining a record of authorship and ownership if the book is resold to others. That “contract” in the NFT of the book might indicate that each resale of the book, passes 10% back to the author.
  • Videos online could be NFTs, with only a certain number of the videos available — imagine the video being a Harvard Lecture in Astrophysics, that can now be distributed on the internet, paid for by every individual who gets a copy and wants to take the class

These, just a few still basic ways to appreciate NFTs, are just the beginning of what’s possible.

The first case, a social network and social media posts, already exists in an increasingly popular site called BitClout. The founder, Nader Al-Naji, was a quantitative software engineer at the investment management firm , before joining Google. They’ve been building BitClout as a “decentralized social network” on the DESO blockchain (sort of an alternative to BitCoin), and you can see the value and my involvement in it here, in that little widget in the upper right hand corner of your browser (that’s my “coin” and value on BitClout).

It’s on that site, BitClout, where I got to know Clay Perry, a musician working in MusicTech, who launched there BitClout’s first music event by issuing tickets through NFT. Follow that? You buy a digital file, tokenized as an NFT and because then that file is immutable, verifiable, and can have other information associated with it, as it’s sold or transferred, that information could be details about an event and access to the show.

With my head fixated on the possibilities but still held back a bit by the notion that it’s merely a digital image, I then bought my first NFT, there on BitClout, but not for the reason you might think; and it’s in my reason, not an investment, that I’ve found others appreciating the potential and considering a purchase of their own.

A few of my readers are aware of the fact that I’m personally passionate about mental health, issues of depression, and the challenges that entrepreneurs and artists in particular, struggle with because of the work we do. I wrote an influential piece for Founder Institute, some time ago, The Mental Health Burden of Entrepreneurship

Why doesn’t everyone become an entrepreneur? It seems an ideal under the circumstances doesn’t it? We all work for ourselves and in a job. Where then is our focus and priority? Is it even sustainable? Frankly, encouraging it would be economically and societally devastating. Only about 5% of the entire population could be sustained as entrepreneurs. Investing their personal wealth and health in addressing major gaps and problems in the market, this subset of our economy is loses a lot of money.

The entrepreneur is the personality trait of some of those professionals, who can’t help but put it all on the line to disrupt or fix something otherwise considered too risky or impossible.

I do what I can to help develop and drive adoption of innovation and solutions in mental health; granted, I can’t do much, I’m not a mental health professional and don’t know the space intimately nor professionally, I’m simply personally passionate about the fact that something more can and must be done.

And that’s when saw a work from @All_things_creative (as they’re known).

I wasn’t interested in the investment potential, I didn’t care about the tokenization, the cryptocurrency, nor the smart contracts that might be associated with it. It didn’t even really matter to me that this work was an NFT and that it might be unique or collectible. What All_things_creative produced was a series of works in a Mental Health Matters Collection; one caught my attention more than the others, I could feel it, personally, just as you might be touched by music, that special film, or a a traditional work of art — Complicated #002

And the potential in NFTs finally struck me — that this work is the labor of THIS artist in particular, and I can support them, directly, by buying that NFT: supporting the entrepreneur, supporting the artist.

I bought my first NFT not to invest, not as a collector, and not even to “own” a creative work but to pass on value to the creator.

Value the Creator

What’s intriguing about BitClout is that for years, platforms have been trying to figure out how to value the creators themselves. That in the arts (music, film, writing, photography, and other arts), more often than not, intermediaries have been necessary so that the creators publish and reach markets with their work; this, understandably, absorbs revenue as each piece in the model takes their cut of the consumer’s purchase — a lawyer, a label, a manager, and distributor.

In 2008, many of us experienced Klout, a platform launched by Joe Fernandez and Binh Tran to measure “influence across the social web.” Nearly 15 years ago, it was already well known that while the internet had disrupted traditional media models, the data and network available thanks to the internet, would present new opportunity to value creators. By 2010, Klout was leading what today we know as Influencer market, having broken ground on the technology to connect people with brands, estimate their impact, and enable a means of compensating influencers for their work. Unfortunately, the idea became embroiled in criticisms of being a “vanity metric” and with some judgement that the model could be gamed, Klout was brought to an end just a few years ago.

Still, the experience left an indelible impression on me because social media was enabling people to create content that connects and helps others, and the impact is poorly valued.

BitClout and the DeSo blockchain changes that, providing an opportunity for you, for me, to invest directly in contributors, creators, and artists; forgoing the criticisms of Klout by enabling a free market (a decentralized market) to value creators. Ironically, it too is not without some controversy as society judges determining a value of a person, and yet, in media, this is precisely what we’ve been trying to do, needing to do, for decades, as journalists, musicians, photographers, and authors, struggle in a digital economy: value the creator.

Interested in learning more? I just had a wonderful chat with Mark Bentley of CloutForum and to contribute a small part, we launched a series of NFTs as a ticket, to participate in an upcoming startup show, where creators and founders pitch their work live to a panel of investors. Check it out here, and tune in to CloutForum.

Originally published at https://seobrien.com on September 27, 2021.

--

--

Paul O'Brien
Paul O'Brien

Written by Paul O'Brien

CEO of MediaTech Ventures, CMO to #VC, #Startup Advisor. I get you funded. Father, marketer, author, #Austin. @seobrien & @AccelerateTexas. https://seobrien.com

No responses yet