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Can’t Read My Poker…Profile Pic? NFTs Give Gambling a Go

I’m not a gambler myself, as I’ve had many bad luck moments and I’d rather just not get my money involved in it if I have the choice. It came as a surprise when I found out that NFTs have taken a new step into money-spending: online casinos. I guess there’s something for everybody, right?

NFTs actually can promote gambling in various ways. Online casinos, for instance, promote games on the result of an NFT match. NFTs are also used as rewards for players, sell merch, etc. Apparently it’s a thing.

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Are NFTs Worth Boiling the Earth?

Short answer: no. Do we really need a longer one?

To understand how NFTs affect the environment, we first need to understand a few concepts around it. NFTs are promoted online through bidding and sales, and even though some think the Internet is magic (sometimes I do), it is actually a network of various computers that store and transmit information to each other around the world. The whole process requires a lot of electrical power to work properly and, therefore, produces a lot of heat.

The combination of the transactions behind NFTs (powered by Ethereum, a crypto  and small contracts marketplace) and data storage overall increase carbon emissions in the atmosphere. As a platform that promotes the future of trades and the way we consume art as a society, it would be expected that NFTs would be more climate sensitive, especially following the recent trend behind major corporates to rely on sustainable methods as a marketing stunt. It’s overwhelming to see yet another futile and powerful energy consumption bomb rise while we could be using money, technology and resources to promote alternative ways to appreciate art and culture.

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Buying Tweets? NFTs are getting crazier

Hey, rich people! I could use some money and I have about 16,000 tweets I can sell. Anyone?

Here’s me saying something revealing in a language you probably don’t know

Okay, I might be a little flustered after learning that Twitter founder Jack Dorsey’s World’s first tweet (“just setting up my twttr”) was sold for $2.9 million in 2021 to Sina Estavi, a crypto entrepreneur from Iran. During the process, the bidding multiplicated in six times its previous value before closing.

This story comes with a twist: more recently, in 2022, Sina tried reselling the tweet, or better saying, the proof of ownership of it, and bombed. Aiming for $48 million, the bidding went as high as $280, and it stayed there. Apparently he was also arrested, as his company goes through rough waters. I guess I’ll keep my tweets to myself.

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Art NFTs: I googled it so you don’t have to

As an avid Twitter user, I’m constantly bombarded with random discussions (thanks, Elon Musk) that hardly come with context or breakdown points. Therefore, it comes as no surprise that my timeline is usually flooding with very predefined POVs regarding Art NFTs, even though I personally had no idea of what all the fuss was about. I just know that it was important for me to pick a side and chose if I think they’re good or bad (there’s no between!), and if you’re anything like me you probably considered doing some quick research before making a personal statement, but got a little demotivated by the long tech magazine articles and cryptocurrency terms.

In simple terms, NFT stands for non-fungible tokens, which basically means that instead of creating a cryptocurrency that you can actually trade and share value, whatever you own as an NFT is unique and it belongs only to you. That concept gets blurry when we see NFTs being applied towards digital art, that can be pirated, copied, replicated, screen-captured, tweeted, you name it. In other words, the NFT itself isn’t the art you own, but something that proves you own it, a form of document that can’t be copied. What do you do with that? Brag about it, I guess.

On the other hand, there’s a promising side, as crypto transactions get more popular over time and promise a more technologically advanced future. Some understand NFTs as a digital art collecting culture, that include bids as high as $69 million. It’s is an interesting way to put value to digital artists that are creating innovating content that might’ve experienced piracy before.

Get to know if I’ve decided how I feel about it in my next posts.