Exactly!!!Or you own access to a digital item, which they can modify at any time.
There is nothing that says the thing you buy must remain 100% the same on their servers where it is used.
Exactly!!!Or you own access to a digital item, which they can modify at any time.
There is nothing that says the thing you buy must remain 100% the same on their servers where it is used.
this is trueOr you own access to a digital item, which they can modify at any time.
There is nothing that says the thing you buy must remain 100% the same on their servers where it is used.
That ^^ if CIG join that NFT bullshit hysteria.. I'm out!I'm watching the video right now. My first reaction to Star Citizen and NFT's is that I will sell my account if I can and never look back..............
I am 100% down for this, and ill explain why:They dont hand out anything.
Imagine the next sale.. its a gold plated Aurora, only 100 will be sold, each at $1000.
That is a quick $100k CIG makes.
Now I own 1 of these rare ships, I can keep it, or I can sell it. No different from how things are right now.
The only difference is that this gold plated Aurora can be sold and re-sold indefinitely to anybody that wants it without CIG being involved in that sale.
This is false, the NFT does by itself, only give you a 'receipt of ownership' and does by itself, not confer actual ownership. They don't even contain the data that you supposedly 'own' as 'unique' - it contains a bit of information directing to a gallery that hosts the actual items and it is assumed (sometimes wrongly) that the gallery providing the NFT has the ability to license/ sell/ show the item in question. NFTs cannot function without a host of some kind to point towards.It's an interesting issue.
Having actual ownership of something you pay for doesn't sound that bad to me on its face.
Honestly, being NFTs and accounted for on CIG servers, etc, what is a complaint that can be put against it that does not already exist with the greymarket/ebay sellers? At least in this way the assets are 100% verified.
It is the opposite. Grey Market trades actual in game items.I am 100% down for this, and ill explain why:
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Honestly, being NFTs and accounted for on CIG servers, etc, what is a complaint that can be put against it that does not already exist with the greymarket/ebay sellers? At least in this way the assets are 100% verified.
Hopefully NFTs wont affect ship, armor, player stats so no balancing is needed, just rarity/appearance/collect-ability etc.Current Grey Market doesn't prevent CIG from making balancing changes to your ships.
This would. Unless we want CIG to be just another shady NFT company selling fools gold and labeling it NFT ...
Also false. The NFT contains no ship data.Current Grey Market doesn't prevent CIG from making balancing changes to your ships.
This would. Unless we want CIG to be just another shady NFT company selling fools gold and labeling it NFT ...
It will still be a limited, tracked, item tradable in (and out )of game. What is the harm that does not exist now?It is the opposite. Grey Market trades actual in game items.
NFTs are disconnected from what they represent - you are trading a receipt claiming to represent something. Remember, the NFT itself is just a small file containing a web address, and a key to its location and nothing more. A CCU on the other hand, is an account-tradeable item that can be used to upgrade a ship to another ship. A ship purchase is an account based item that confers access to utilize a ship in game. NFTs are neither, they are simply claiming to 'own' that thing, but are not the thing.
Also false. The NFT contains no ship data.
If you look at NFT sales, the thing that the NFT points to 'owning' can be changed, or removed. See: Copyright takedown of NFT-sold artwork removing the artwork from the NFT wallet and yet... people still insist the NFT itself has the value. True fools gold.
Ownership is not a pre-requisite to selling. How do I know? There is no actual 'requirement' to fulfil it to sell something as an NFT, and NFTs do not have any kind of protection against this. You 100% have to trust the gallery that 'hosts' the NFT. Did you know an NFT may not even confer the copyright to the thing you now 'own'? Because you own a 'receipt' of sale, and that's all the NFT is.Wait ... You're telling me I'm wrong about an imaginary NFT that CIG has never sold?
NFTs are just digital assets blockchained for proof of ownership.
If one were to "NFT" an entire ship and sell it, then one would assume you are infact selling away the rights to that ship.
That's the function of a NFT.
Thus any replication or modification is illegal, as you are no longer the legal owner of the asset that was purchased.
How an NFT actually "works" in practice is entirely up to the rights distributor but ownership is a prerequisite when selling.
Otherwise you don't actually own the digital asset, despite your digital receipt. And thus, a scam and not a real NFT.
If I purchase a photo from a photo studio, I am licensing the copyright of that photo so that I can use it for specific purposes such as reprinting or display, or I am purchasing a physical good that confers to me certain usage rights. That's how it works. Stock photo purchases are the same - you purchase the license, it is not an exclusive license in most cases, but it can be. That is the value in art, the license to utilize the work. Physical art confers the right to control access to viewing the art, you can make it more exclusive that way, its a very powerful right to have over artwork.Copyright and ownership are two different things.
If I buy an Aurora NFT ... I own that specific digital asset.
I don't have the right to replicate the asset and resell it as my own.
Photo studios are literally the same way ...
Does said 10 acres come with the title of Lord or Lady?If I purchase a photo from a photo studio, I am licensing the copyright of that photo so that I can use it for specific purposes such as reprinting or display, or I am purchasing a physical good that confers to me certain usage rights. That's how it works. Stock photo purchases are the same - you purchase the license, it is not an exclusive license in most cases, but it can be. That is the value in art, the license to utilize the work. Physical art confers the right to control access to viewing the art, you can make it more exclusive that way, its a very powerful right to have over artwork.
NFTs are a receipt saying you own something, but without any rights to it.
Speaking of, I do have 10 acres of prime real estate on the Moon I could sell you, that is WAY more unique then any NFT you may be able to purchase, and for less then $60 million US if you're interested? It is visible via telescope and I promise you that it will be far more of a long term investment given the uptick in space interest.
If I purchase a photo from a photo studio, I am licensing the copyright of that photo so that I can use it for specific purposes such as reprinting or display, or I am purchasing a physical good that confers to me certain usage rights. That's how it works. Stock photo purchases are the same - you purchase the license, it is not an exclusive license in most cases, but it can be. That is the value in art, the license to utilize the work. Physical art confers the right to control access to viewing the art, you can make it more exclusive that way, its a very powerful right to have over artwork.
NFTs are a receipt saying you own something, but without any rights to it.
Speaking of, I do have 10 acres of prime real estate on the Moon I could sell you, that is WAY more unique then any NFT you may be able to purchase, and for less then $60 million US if you're interested? It is visible via telescope and I promise you that it will be far more of a long term investment given the uptick in space interest.