NFTs are an art form, so like any art only invest your money in something you like or catches your eye. The NFT project Art Value offered early white-lists to fans and users of NFT marketplace OpenSea, it creates an art 'number' from the NFT bid you submit. It's weird and not for everyone.
While people are flipping NFTs it's actually nice just to collect art you enjoy and hold it in your wallet or marketplace account. Try to stop thinking of NFTs as metadata and instead as art, and by purchasing an NFT you're supporting the creator and their community. Think, if you make no money from this NFT will you still enjoy it?
The resources you can use to understand NFTs
A new crypto survey found that 96% of Americans and 99% of Brazilian and Mexican respondents failed to pass a 17-question quiz regarding basic crypto concepts. The inaugural quiz and the results were published by crypto literacy.org, which is an industry initiative promoting broad consumer education of digital currencies. The program has backing from a group of major crypto players, including Coinme and CoinDesk.
Methodology for the crypto literacy survey and results
The quiz assesses knowledge of cryptocurrencies, Bitcoin, decentralized finance (DeFi), crypto exchanges, blockchains, mining, types of wallets, non-fungible tokens (NFTs), and general sentiment towards digital currencies. The survey was conducted by YouGov to a sample of 1,000 crypto- or Bitcoin-aware internet users within each country, balanced across age, ethnicity, gender, and education.
According to the results, a significant crypto knowledge gap exists across the three surveyed countries: America, Brazil, and Mexico. Specific to the U.S., 4 in 10 respondents were unable to answer more than half of the questions, choosing instead the "don't know" response. However, Americans performed better than Brazilians, where 3 in 10 answered a third of quiz questions correctly. Overall, there were similar crypto adoption rates across each: 14% in Mexico, 15% in Brazil, 17% in the U.S.
"The survey was originally going to cover the U.S., but as we see adoption growing in Latin America we wanted to include two of the largest markets there to provide international benchmarking," said CEO and co-founder of Coinme and Crypto Literacy Month, Neil Bergquist, during a phone interview with me. "We'll continue to add other countries as we grow. For instance, El Salvador will be interesting to add as that country formally adopted Bitcoin as legal tender in September. We're curious to see if government adoption drives public understanding and use of crypto."
Key highlights of the crypto literacy report
The full report can be found here, but here are a few of the more interesting takeaways:
Ownership is the best teacher. In the U.S., Mexico, and Brazil, owning cryptocurrency is associated with higher performance on a test of cryptocurrency literacy.
Comprehension of Bitcoin fundamentals is low. Nine out of 10 survey respondents lacked knowledge that Bitcoin's supply was limited to 21 million. Additionally, only 4 out of 10 respondents had a clear understanding of what determines its price.
Crypto's use case varies by geography and generation. Approximately 25% of Brazilians and one-third of Mexican respondents would use crypto to pay for goods and services. However, 50% of Americans reported they would utilize crypto to save for the future. Younger generations in the U.S. were nearly three times more likely to use crypto as a means for payments than older generations who see it as more of an investment.
Mexico and Brazil lead with intent to buy or sell crypto. Of respondents, 30% of Brazilians and 28% of Mexicans advised they intend to purchase or sell cryptocurrencies in the next six months, versus 12% of Americans.
Charting a path toward greater crypto understanding
One finding that was a bit surprising was that as an asset class, cryptocurrencies are failing in their collective mission to advance financial inclusion and economic equality -- those were key drivers of the Bitcoin white paper that started the crypto craze 13 years ago. The cryptoliteracy.org organizers believe that they can change that imbalance through education.
"One of the goals of cryptoliteracy.org is to turn that around by providing an accessible and inclusive learning environment for anyone who wants to better understand cryptocurrencies at a fundamental level that's not a Reddit forum or YouTube tribe, which aren't always acceptable to new users," said Bergquist.
Bergquist suggests that the "crypto curious" can sample a series of curated learning resources that progress through beginner, intermediate, and expert stages on various topics. These resources are free and are offered as part of the inaugural Crypto Literacy Month, which is underway now
Is creating and purchasing of NFTs now or in the future prosperous?
It seems strange to think that this time last year, most people hadn’t even heard of NFTs. In 2021, they took the art world by storm, with pieces like The Merge and Beeple’s The First 5000 Days selling for tens of millions of dollars.
Of course, they remain a controversial topic. Some claim that the energy usage and carbon emissions connected with their use offset any potential benefit they might have. At least one company backtracked out of plans to become involved in the trend following negative reception to the news from their customers.
Everyone Needs To Know About The Biggest Future NFTs Trends.
Many others, however, are confident that they bring value and innovation to a number of different industries, from obvious ones such as gaming and anything involving the metaverse to less obvious use cases such as real estate, healthcare, and insurance
While so far, most of what we have seen in the NFT space has been related to art and selling artwork, we are likely to see many more uses for the technology in years to come. Here’s a look at some of the areas where exciting work is underway.
First – what is an NFT?
NFT stands for non-fungible token. Collins dictionary – which picked the phrase as its word of the year for 2021 – defines an NFT as “a unique digital certificate, registered in a blockchain, that is used to record ownership of an asset such as an artwork or collectible.”
Leaving aside the technical details, an easy way to think about it is a digital certificate of ownership that, because it is stored on an encrypted, distributed database (a blockchain), cannot be forged, tampered with, or altered by anyone apart from its owner. This means they can be used as a theoretically fool proof method of creating scarcity (and hence value) for an otherwise infinitely-replicable piece of digital information. The information it represents could be a piece of digital art, music, a piece of clothing or item to wear in a game, the keys to a virtual reality house – potentially anything that someone might want to be unique.
NFTs and the metaverse
The metaverse is a hot topic in technology circles right now, and definitions differ according to who you ask. Generally speaking, though, it refers to a connected, persistent digital ecosystem that is more immersive than the existing internet – perhaps involving virtual reality (VR). The metaverse will let us work, play, socialize, travel, and educate ourselves within a consistent digital environment. It has been called a trillion-dollar business opportunity and “the biggest disrupter to how we live our lives, ever seen.”
NFTs will play a number of important roles in the virtual worlds that will make up the metaverse. Firstly, they enable digital items to be unique. We all know that people in the real world like collecting and showing off rare and unique things, and there’s no reason to think the virtual world will be any different! It’s already possible to buy unique artwork to display in your virtual reality art gallery. Similarly, Nike recently sold 600 pairs of shoes as NFTs – making itself over $3 million in the process. In reality, these were actually just pictures of shoes that can only be looked at. In the future, it’s likely that they will be functioning virtual shoes that can be worn by our avatars as we go about our digital lives. Think of it as being able to kit out your character in a video game in one-of-a-kind clothing that no one else can own. After all, there’s no reason to think that anyone’s ego will be any smaller in the metaverse than it is in the real world.
NFTs and the internet of things
It’s estimated that by 2030 there could be more than 125 billion connected devices in the world. This huge network of computers, vehicles, appliances, wearables, industrial machinery, and many other items is what we mean when we talk about the internet of things (IoT) – and many think that NFTs have an important role to play.
Much of the communication that takes place on the IoT is made up of machine-to-machine (M2M) communications. Think of the smartphone technology that you may well have in your own home; for example – devices like smart light bulbs, refrigerators, and AI voice assistants are all capable of communicating with each other. In a smart factory or warehouse, the same thing happens but at a far greater scale, as hundreds or thousands of machines all communicate and exchange data to keep the business running. NFTs are potentially useful here because they allow machines to authenticate the data that is coming in from other machines. Basically, this is the digital equivalent of a warehouse manager checking the paperwork when they take delivery of a container load of inventory.
Ideas like this are already being put into operation today – cybersecurity specialists WISeKey uses semiconductors implanted onto physical network infrastructure that automatically mount NFTs in order to certify that the device is trustworthy.
Another initiative is looking at connecting NFTs with city infrastructure assets such as street lamps, bus shelters, and traffic lights. Here, the tokens would enable accurate data from these devices to be made available for commercialization by companies looking to develop new services, such as communications companies.
NFTs in healthcare
Advocates for the use of NFT technology in the healthcare space point to the fact that it could one day potentially help individuals to take control of their own health data. It could even let them make money from it.
Personal healthcare data is bought and sold all the time, generating vast amounts of value. However, very little of that goes to the person who really owns the data – the patient themself. Today, it’s easier than ever to generate and collect health data, thanks to the availability of wearables, monitors, and sensors. Even genomic information is cheaply accessible, thanks to services that let individuals map and analyze their own DNA information. Many of us have no idea where the information generated every time we use a device or interact with a service is ending up. In fact, it turns out that much of this information will probably eventually make its way to the black market – where an individual healthcare record is said to be around $250. Yes, even criminals are making more money from our health data than we are.
NFTs allow information to be tagged with data, which means it can be tracked whenever it is passed on. Not only does this mean better oversight of where our information ends up, it means one day we could potentially take advantage of the smart contract capabilities of NFT and blockchain technology to ensure we are paid the royalties we are due every time our data is passed on.
That’s the theory, anyway – and companies such as Aimedis.io are already exploring ways of making it a reality. But regardless of whether we will one day be able to claim our share of the billions that are generated through the sale of health data, NFTs could potentially bring transparency and accountability to the transfer of this highly sensitive information, and that alone has to be a good thing!
Fad or the future?
Of course, for every person proclaiming that NFTs are the future of any (or all) enterprises and fields of human endeavor, there is another saying it is simply a faddish flash-in-the-pan that will quickly be forgotten about. The truth is that no one knows for sure what the future holds. However, it's undeniable that a lot of big players are investing heavily in the technology, and there's clearly a firm belief, among some very smart and well-resourced people, that it will have a role to play in our futures. Certainly, there are pressing issues that need to be addressed – it would be morally wrong to simply ignore the astronomical energy use involved. But at the same time, the technology is potentially too transformative to be written off or ignored.