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The Almighty Buck Businesses

NFT Market Surpassed $40 Billion in 2021, New Estimate Shows (bloomberg.com) 34

Nearly $41 billion worth of cryptocurrency was sent to two types of Ethereum smart contracts associated with NFT marketplaces and collections from the beginning of 2021 through mid-December, according to a new estimate from blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis. From a report: The metric revises an estimate the firm included in a December report on NFTs that was based on data through mid-October, said Maddie Kennedy, a spokeswoman for Chainalysis.
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NFT Market Surpassed $40 Billion in 2021, New Estimate Shows

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  • by leptons ( 891340 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @11:13AM (#62148721)
    While they might be useful for some people, it just seems like a convenient way for rich people to hide their money.
    • by Kisai ( 213879 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @11:27AM (#62148751)

      Correction: NFT Market worth $0 in 2021, New Estimate Shows

      NFT's have no tangible value. It's a grift designed by cryptobros to inflate their "property" by selling it to each other and then hoping some idiot wants their garbage.

      The vast majority of NFT "artwork" is either
      a) Stolen (not the "minter"'s property to begin with)
      b) Algorithmically generated (read, no creative value)

      If someone wants to own a receipt to garbage, let them, but let's not fool ourselves into believing that an image of a computer generated monkey with one pixel or color different is a unique image. It's just a game right now, and anyone stupid enough to buy-in, is going to find no way to get out.

      • by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @11:56AM (#62148861)
        I think that greatly depends on the NFT. One of the first articles where I learned about them on Slashdot was about a band that was selling them. Ownership of the NFT would give the holder free tickets to shows and merchandise some number of times per year, so clearly that has some value. The rest of it is only worth as much as someone else is willing to pay for it and there's a pretty long history of people exchanging digital goods for actual money. It's hardly surprising that people are just using them as a way to push useless crap, but that's not so different than anything else.
      • by hey! ( 33014 )

        Now you know how Marxists feel about profit in a capitalist system. One of their chief criticisms of capitalism is that things are valued by their market selling price, allowing capitalists to claim what they see as fictional excess "value" as profit. They are criticizing the notion that if an NFT can be sold for a million dollars, that it must be *worth* a million dollars.

        Now to be fair, this critique of capitalism is a straw man. Adam Smith was fully aware of the difference between "value in use" vs. "v

  • the fleecing will continue until The Stupid finds the next shiny thing.
  • I guess that's an achievement for statistics in 2021.

    Finally we have an actual quantitative metric for stupidity, although this is likely heavily biased overrepresenting the 1%ers.

  • by WoodstockJeff ( 568111 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @11:38AM (#62148787) Homepage

    Could work. Should top the current $1B asking price in a few hours.

  • by Sebby ( 238625 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @11:44AM (#62148811)

    Scam Market Surpassed $40 Billion in 2021, New Estimate Shows

    There, FTFY.

  • Crypto and NFT go bust.
  • I understand what NFTs are.

    I don't understand why anyone would want one, or would pay even a small amount of money for it, much less the absurd amounts that sound like they are in play here.

    Can someone enlighten me?

    • People who invest in really dumb startups have noticed a severe lack of really dumb startups since the pandemic began. They need to find something even more idiotic to throw their money at. There is a lot of money at the top that needs to be thrown around lately.

    • It's the modern version of "I've got a bridge to sell you..." TLDR: People who have more money than they know what to do with and believe that they can make some sort of return by speculating on something sold to them as an "asset". Also, techbro factor.
    • Some people think they'll make a profit by selling them to a greater fool. Some people want them as bling on their Twitter profile, for them the excessive prices are the whole point. And some of it is probably money laundering: I can't imagine that criminals would ignore an opportunity like this.

    • As someone who has been doing applied crypto since the 1990s, I don't see anything that a NFT offers, that a GPG signature doesn't, other than being part of a group of signatures, and bundled in a public ledger. The only difference between some random person off the street signing a .JPG file and a NFT is because the NFT signature is part of a made-up chain.

      I don't see NFTs helping the artists at all, unless they are doing the NFTs themselves. Instead, I read reports of artwork ripped off and NFTs made fr

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by crgrace ( 220738 )

        Poor stranger is now down $14K. You turned $12k and a piece of art worth $0 into $26K.

        No, you turned $12k in $14k. You don't count your initial investment twice. You had to put in your $12k savings into duping the mark to spending $14k on your NFT.

  • by MtHuurne ( 602934 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @12:05PM (#62148897) Homepage

    Not every transaction is a sale. Several people have "sold" NFTs to their own accounts, probably in an attempt to drive up the price. We know about the ones where the owners weren't savvy enough to use wallets that couldn't be traced back to them, but we don't know how many of the other transactions are real sales.

  • It sure would suck if the power went out.
  • Attend award show afterparties, follow celebrities into the washroom, and wait to see if any fail to flush. Then take a picture... and sell an NFT for the raw file.

    Pun not intended... then intended.

  • Sometimes it feels downright torture for all of us anti-bitcoin slashdotter gang here.

    How about NFTs of individual Bitcoins, wrapped on some layer 2 Zero Knowledge rollup on a side chain of Ethereum ?
    No? An ETF of those ? DeFi staking of those ?

    TBH, the concept of Futures & Options felt equally tortuous to my parents. Going short itself was laughed out of the room by them. Listing your equity on a stock market where it's valuation goes up n down every minute was itself somewhat of a casino biz for them

  • Short it and watch it go down to zero. Profit.

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