Lưu trữ cho từ khóa: art

Tokenization of the music industry with music NFTs | Opinion

Party Like It’s 1999,sang Prince Rogers Nelson, because on June 1, 1999, a new computer software service would forever change how music was distributed, consumed, and even written. Napster was a peer-to-peer file-sharing service that quickly gained popularity among music fans—since its launch in May 1999, it had gathered over 20 million users by March 2000—looking for a way to share and download music online for free. The cataloging software, created by Shawn Fanning and Sean Parker, searched your computer’s hard drive, listed all the MP3 music files contained in it, and allowed anyone else using the service to share and play those files.

Napster’s popularity was short-lived as its ultimate demise resulted from its legal troubles stemming from cybercrime: file sharing and piracy. According to the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), the company’s computer software facilitated copyright infringement and filed a lawsuit against Napster. Napster was ultimately shut down in 2001.  Nevertheless, Napster’s technology had a profound impact on the music industry by paving the way for other P2P file-sharing services, which helped to popularize the idea of downloading music online, which gave rise to the concept of the first virtual currency for peer-to-peer systems: Karma. Karma was introduced in 2003 as a way to pay for P2P file-sharing services.

Magic internet money—Karma

The co-founder of the first internet money—way ahead of Bitcoin (BTC)—was a virtual currency called Karma, designed by Dr. Emin Gun Sirer, who is also the founder and CEO of Ava Labs.  Dr. Sirer explained that the emergence of the internet and, subsequently, the World Wide Web marked a pivotal shift from isolated, local computing to global-scale computing:

Architecturally, we transitioned from standalone computers to a ‘client-server architecture,’ which enabled us to connect to remote services operated by others to leverage their programs and capabilities. This new paradigm gave rise to digital services that catered to the entire world, created millions of jobs, and solidified the U.S.’s position as a global economic leader.”

Dr. Sirer added, “I built a system called Karma for ensuring that people who participate in peer-to-peer file sharing networks don’t just leech. They don’t just take resources from the network, but they also donate resources. So everybody was downloading files, nobody was putting up files for upload. And so my solution to this was, what if there was some magic Internet money that nobody controlled that you needed to use to download files? And if you ran out of it, then that would put an end to your leeching ways and you would now put up some files to get your Karma back.”

Ava Labs is a software company founded in 2018 that is headquartered in Brooklyn, New York, whose mission is to tokenize the world’s assets on the Avalanche public blockchain and other blockchain ecosystems. This includes tokenizing the music industry with music NFTs. 

Music NFTs

Dr. Sirer explains that blockchains represent the next phase in the evolution of networked computer systems by facilitating many-to-many communication over a shared ledger. This allows multiple computers to collaborate, achieve consensus, act in unison, and build shared services in the network. In turn, this enables the development of unique, secure tokenized assets, such as music NFTs, among many other innovative applications.

By harnessing the power of blockchain technology, which records the copyrights to ownership of the music that cannot be changed, the Avaissance program music NFTs give musicians a new universe of creative and financial options. They expand the range of music they can make by allowing them to sell music NFTs directly to fans via an NFT marketplace. Dr. Sirer points out that there are different types of tokens.

A real-world asset 

A token can be the direct or indirect representation of a traditional asset. For example, numerous musicians are currently publishing complete songs and albums as music NFTs or selling their fans NFT concert tickets. While music NFTs offer exciting opportunities for artists, they raise copyright and intellectual property concerns. When artists tokenize their music, they must ensure they have the right to do so. Smart contracts, a key component of music NFTs, automate the payment of royalties to creators each time their tokenized music is resold. This feature is a game-changer in an industry where musicians often lose out on resale profits. Smart contracts simplify the process of compensating musicians, but it also raises questions about how different types of music royalties should be calculated and distributed fairly. 

A virtual item

A token can represent a piece of digital art, including a musician’s album cover, poster, and show photographs; a collectible in the form of a musician’s autograph; a gaming skin; videos of virtual concerts or tracks; virtual artist meet and greet experiences; and more. These digital assets can be tokenized into music NFTs to be traded for a profit. These can be varied in function and form as well. They can range from simple non-programmable pictures of the musician, a common use of NFTs, to complex assets, some used in virtual concerts, that can encode all sorts of functions and features of the asset directly inside the asset itself.

Pay-for-use

Public blockchains constitute shared computing resources that must be allocated efficiently. A token is the perfect mechanism to meter resource consumption and prioritize important activities. Such tokens are sometimes known as “gas tokens.” For example, BTC is the gas token of the Bitcoin blockchain, ETH for Ethereum, AVAX for Avalanche, and so on. Without gas or transaction costs, a single user or small group of users could potentially overwhelm the blockchain, similar to a denial of service attack, making the blockchain unusable.

Musical entertainment in the metaverse

Sebastien Borget, COO and co-founder of The Sandbox, a culture and entertainment platform based on the Ethereum network, explained that he established a new web3 arena for musical entertainment in the metaverse called  ShowCity that is home to The Voice and other TV shows.   ShowCity is also home to music industry heavyweights such as Snoop Dog, Steve Aoki, Chainsmokers, and  Warner Music Group—the first major music firm to enter into the metaverse with its top recording artists like Bruno Mars, Twenty-One Pilots, Ed Sheeran, Madonna, Metallica to hold virtual concerts and other musical experiences.

ShowCity offers musicians exclusive digital and physical perks—such as tickets to live tapings of The Voice—if they purchase a LAND in ShowCity in exchange for The Sandbox (SAND), which was deemed a security by the US Securities and Exchange Commission last year.  

Snoop Dogg, tweeting about Sandbox Land Sale Prices: “That’s a bargain.”

Musicians create avatars, digital versions of themselves, to hold virtual concerts, selling millions of dollars in tickets and NFT merchandise. All items acquired in The Sandbox are 100% owned by the musicians themselves, creating revenue opportunities.

Sebastien Borget indicated that ShowCity brings the open metaverse one step forward in the direction of sustainable fan-owned and community-driven musical entertainment initiatives with its partnerships with non-profit foundations supporting social, environmental, and climate causes.

Potential legal challenges to the tokenization of music

As musicians are turning to tokenization of their music, holding metaverse concerts, issuing collectible NFTs, and collectors are investing in music NFTs, they should bear in mind that the tokenization of the music industry comes with potential legal challenges and financial quagmires. These include issues concerning copyright, taxation, security classification of gas tokens, AML concerns for metaverse land sales, sanctions compliance, artist royalty, environmental footprint challenges to music NFT and metaverse platforms, and other matters that could complicate the music NFT landscape.

Jonathan Cutler, senior manager at Washington National Tax, Deloitte Tax LLP, said that,

The final digital asset reporting regulations, published at the end of June, keep NFTs in scope for Form 1099-DA reporting. The rules include a reporting threshold of $600 for sales of ‘specified’ NFTs—NFTs that are indivisible, unique, and do not reference certain excluded property. Where sales exceed $600, a digital asset broker may report the NFT sales on a single Form 1099-DA for the year rather than separate forms for each sale. These regulations make no comment on treatment of certain NFTs as collectibles for tax purposes. The April draft Form 1099-DA, which is pending redraft for the final rules, also included no reference to collectibles.” 

Tổng hợp và chỉnh sửa: ThS Phạm Mạnh Cường
Theo Crypto News

Are NFTs still alive and will NFT.NYC be back in 2025? | Opinion

This year’s NFT.NYC was different. Since its launch in 2019, NFT enthusiasts and industry players have come together here to learn more about the latest trends and innovations in the space. The event is all about celebrating the impacts and potential of NFTs with a clear mission to drive mainstream adoption. As such, the level of excitement and investment around the event can be seen as a barometer for the state of the NFT landscape—and this year’s event was quiet.

Far less capital was spent on activations and booths, and the show floor felt muted—even more so than the 2023 event, which itself was markedly quieter than 2022. There were still some interesting projects there, but the energy was lacking and it felt very different to the excitement and conversations I’ve had at recent events like Token2049 Dubai and GDC.

Are NFTs dead?

Back in 2021, NFT.NYC was a remarkable spectacle that was dubbed the “Crypto Coachella” and “Super Bowl” of the NFT world. Steered by immense excitement and anticipation, it drew attention from all corners of the globe with its dazzling celebrity endorsements, extravagant marketing campaigns, and eye-popping multi-million dollar art sales that illuminated billboards across Times Square. The event reflected the thriving market when trading volumes surged to $17.6 billion. That said, that era was also reflective of speculation and blind following of profits that led to many users being burned by the greed of bad actors and projects that lacked substance. 

So, does this shift mean NFTs are dying? Not at all. This year’s event reflects a shift within the crypto industry for the better. NFTs have matured: no longer a speculative fad, they have been subsumed into the wider verticals of the crypto industry, negating the need for an NFT-focused event; people have moved on to discuss tokenization in gaming, finance, property, and more. NFTs no longer have to boot-strap their own infrastructure; instead, they can tap into the robust systems and scalability offered by established crypto ecosystems.

Shifting tides

What’s changed? The NFT market crashed during the crypto winter of 2022. Digital collectibles, as a use case, claimed the term ‘NFT’ and became the sole application in everyone’s mind when they think of ‘NFTs.’ Their association with “expensive digital images of monkeys” and overpriced JPEGs gave the industry a bad name. Without the aggressive speculation driving them, digital collectibles are no longer as popular; the feverish buzz around collectible NFTs has fizzled away. 

Total number of sales involving NFTs in the art segment worldwide | Source: Statista

According to Statista, NFT sales volume in the art segment decreased by over 30% from April 2021 to April 2024. The downturn in October 2023 saw the NFT market experience a significant decline, causing floor prices to plummet, marking an 83% decline from its peak. 

NFT market maturation

The purpose of NFTs has shifted, and we need to reclaim the term away from collectibles and move the conversation toward practical use cases. 

One of the most exciting is the tokenization of financial and real-world assets. As of December 2023, the Total Value Locked (TVL) in tokenized RWAs exceeded $6.5 billion. The financial industry is leading the way in RWA adoption with the tokenization of financial instruments. This year, we’ve seen players such as Blackrock and Franklin Templeton flicking the switch. 

People are also excited by the prospect of asset tokenization to represent ownership assets, including real estate, art, stocks, and more. Think about the division of a real estate asset into tokens. Fractional ownership of the property is now feasible. For instance, if 1,000 tokens signify 1% ownership each, investors can engage in trading these tokens on blockchain platforms, thereby improving liquidity and streamlining ownership transfer processes. 

In gaming, NFTs have redefined digital ownership, allowing players to truly own virtual assets such as characters and weapons. These NFTs can be bought, sold, and traded in vibrant marketplaces, generating real value—particularly when ‘dynamic’ NFTs are used, allowing the gamer to upgrade their items as they are used in-game. Cross-platform compatibility adds to the appeal, enabling seamless transfers between games (though there are other challenges to be solved in this area before it goes mainstream). 

The shift from hype and speculation to integration within the wider crypto space serves as clear evidence of the maturation of NFTs. This transformation brings tremendous advantages, such as leveraging existing infrastructure, and scalability, and fostering collaboration and innovation. As NFTs continue to diversify and find new applications, their role within the crypto space will solidify. The future of NFTs is filled with promise, as their sustained growth and integration pave the way for a thriving ecosystem.

Tổng hợp và chỉnh sửa: ThS Phạm Mạnh Cường
Theo Crypto News

Celebrating ‘Plastic Free July’ with Tezos NFTs and art | Opinion

Since its initial coin offering in 2017, the Tezos blockchain has become the art world’s favorite because of its energy efficiency and low cost. AI artists, including Refik Anadol, an internationally renowned media artist, director, and pioneer in data and machine intelligence aesthetics, use Tezos to execute peer-to-peer transactions and deploy smart contracts. The token is listed on crypto exchanges as Tezos (XTZ).

In addition to being part of Art Basel since 2021 and collaborating with environmental gallery Serpentine Arts Technologies since 2023, during this Plastic Free July, for the first time, Tezos blockchain is part of Ribela Love Nature, an open-air, sustainable techno event of art and music, that is featuring over 100 different artworks from more than 30 visual artists, more than 20 NFT artwork for sale, and music in more than 15 live acts and DJ sets.

Plastic Free July draws attention to the impact of plastic waste on nature. The ‘Plastic Free July’ campaign originated in Australia in 2011 to draw attention to the global problem of plastic waste, which is causing serious problems for animals, nature, and people’s health. The award-winning campaign is a key initiative of the Plastic Free Foundation, which works towards a vision of seeing a world free of plastic waste, as detailed in the “2023 Impact Report.”

The Plastic Free July campaign was instrumental in the adoption of the world’s first Plastic Treaty, which was supported by 175 nations at the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) meeting in Nairobi in 2022. UNEP’s Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on Plastics Pollution is still negotiating the Treaty’s terms, so it could be implemented as soon as 2025.

My Plastic Free July art shows to draw attention to plastic pollution’s harm on marine animals are held at two museums:

  1. Putnam History Museum—Healing Waters by Selva Ozelli
  1. Havre de Grace Maritime Museum—Moody Blue Crabs by Selva Ozelli 

Scaling up Tezos

Parallel to participating in the sustainable techno event, Tezos X vision also announced a significant development in the Tezos ecosystem: the introduction of Jstz (pronounced ‘justice’), a smart rollup powered by JavaScript that will scale up and make Tezos an interoperable blockchain platform and an OP blockchain-based, cloud-like backend for all kinds of applications. 

Scaling the utility of blockchain is crucial to widespread adoption. After all, the fastest, most cost-efficient blockchain is useless if people have nothing to do or nowhere to go from there. And they’ll only have those things if someone builds them on Jstz, an L2 rollup being built on Tezos to allow developers to use JavaScript and its vast resources such as JavaScript APIs, battle-tested JS tools, npm ecosystem, and libraries with the best perks of web3, with built-in identity, wallet, and payments Jstz GitHub repository. 

NFT tax reporting regulations finalized

On June 28, 2024, the US Treasury Department and the US Internal Revenue Service issued final digital asset broker reporting regulations that mandate broker reporting for centralized exchanges and hosted wallet providers, providing extensive rules under which transactions in digital assets, which include NFTs, will be reported in the US. However, it set aside related rules for decentralized finance and unhosted wallets as it continues to study 44,000 comments to the agency. Defi operations and non-hosted wallet providers will have to wait for their own rules later in the year.

The final regulations will go into effect for transactions starting in 2025 and will require digital asset brokers to keep tabs on the cost basis for customers’ tokens starting in 2026. They will also need to file 1099-DA forms like their traditional investment firm cousins, with a $600 annual threshold on NFT proceeds before they need to be reported.

The final regulations provide NFT platforms with needed clarity about their reporting obligations while also creating transparency for both artist taxpayers and the IRS when it comes to tax filing and compliance. It is also an essential step in closing the estimated $50 billion crypto tax gap and will further legitimize digital assets. Artists will now know what they need to report for activity conducted with a digital asset broker NFT platform, and the IRS will know what to expect to see on tax returns.

Tổng hợp và chỉnh sửa: ThS Phạm Mạnh Cường
Theo Crypto News