{"id":50619,"date":"2021-10-28T14:58:12","date_gmt":"2021-10-28T06:58:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.imoney.my\/articles\/?p=50619"},"modified":"2023-08-17T23:20:41","modified_gmt":"2023-08-17T15:20:41","slug":"what-are-nft","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.imoney.my\/articles\/what-are-nft","title":{"rendered":"What You Need To Know About Non-Fungible Tokens (NFT)"},"content":{"rendered":"
Even if you do not know what NFTs are, you\u2019ve probably heard about it given its rising popularity lately. Just three years ago, the NFT market cap was at USD$42mil. Fast forward to the end of 2020, its value has jumped 705% to USD$338 mil<\/a> according to NFT tracking site NonFungible<\/a>.<\/p>\n \u2018Non-fungible token\u2019 or NFT is a digital token that allows the buying or selling of digital assets. Each NFT is tied to a unique one of a kind asset that is irreplaceable and inseparable once the transaction is recorded in the blockchain. Examples of NFT include, but not limited to, drawings, music, animated GIFs, video, in-game purchases, and even concert tickets. Imagine yourself as an artist. You upload your unique artwork to the internet where people can freely screenshot, copy and use your art without crediting or paying you royalties as the creator.<\/p>\n Let\u2019s say you made a painting today and decide to turn it into an NFT. Your artwork is \u201ctokenized\u201d into a digital token with a unique serial number and an owner\u2019s name. This makes it valuable as there is only one such token in the world.<\/p>\n An NFT is like owning the original manuscript for the first Harry Potter book. While the text may be reproduced and copied millions of times and shared around the world, you have a digital certificate proving that yours is where all those copies came from.<\/p>\n These tokens can then be traded for money or other valuables, with each transaction being recorded on the blockchain as a record of everyone who has ever owned it.<\/p>\n The first thing you need to know is that NFTs are traded using cryptocurrency via a blockchain. The reason for this is its traceability and authentication. With cryptocurrency, every transaction is recorded and verified through the blockchain.<\/p>\n The main function of blockchains is to verify the authenticity of each NFT transaction, so both the buyer and seller of the asset will be able to differentiate between an authentic and fake NFT. As soon as the blockchain captures the transaction, the ownership of the token is immediately transferred to the buyer, which then cannot be erased, modified or replaced.<\/p>\n Some popular cryptocurrencies used today are Bitcoin, Ethereum, Dogecoin and many more – but so far, most NFT transactions utilise the Ethereum blockchain for the purpose of verification and data-storage. However, Tron<\/a> and Bitcoin<\/a> cryptocurrencies have also created NFTs in their respective blockchains.<\/p>\n What you get after the transaction of an NFT really depends on the agreement between you and the owner of the digital asset. Normally, the owner sells the token along with the ownership of that asset.<\/a><\/p>\n However, there are owners that only sell the digital tokens. These are owners that still want to hold the copyrights of the asset. In this case, you do not own the original piece – and you are not subject to the profit or losses made from the original asset – unless you have an additional agreement with the owner of the digital asset.<\/p>\n Traditional art such as the ones in museums have very high value due to authenticity, history, sentimental value or some form of tale behind it. Like art pieces in museums and galleries, NFTs are valued the same way. The deeper value and uniqueness of an NFT are subjective though. What is valuable to you may not be for others.<\/p>\n The NFT that you buy might stay relevant between one to five years from now. In this case, you can hold the NFT until you find the highest bid for it and sell it back for profit.<\/p>\n 1. The Way NFTs are Valued<\/strong><\/p>\n One of the risks in the NFT market is the price uncertainty. This is due to the decentralised nature of cryptocurrencies. Typically, NFTs are valued by these criteria:<\/p>\n \u25cf Seller credibility<\/span>What is an NFT?<\/span><\/h2>\n
\nAn example of an NFT that sold for millions is from Twitter founder, Jack Dorsey, who sold an autographed version of his first tweet for US$2.9 million.<\/p>\n<\/span>How does an NFT work?<\/span><\/h2>\n
<\/span>How are NFTs traded and sold?<\/span><\/h2>\n
<\/span>Who holds the ownership of an NFT?<\/span><\/h2>\n
<\/span>How is an NFT valued?<\/span><\/h2>\n
<\/span>What are the Risks of Investing in NFT?<\/span><\/h2>\n
\n\u25cf Uniqueness of the NFT
\n\u25cf Artist\u2019s digital creativity
\n\u25cf Amount of supply of the NFT
\n\u25cf Historical or aesthetical value<\/p>\n