Altcoins Talks - Cryptocurrency Forum

Cryptocurrency Ecosystem => NFTs & Collectibles => Topic started by: RSRS on July 04, 2021, 07:39:57 AM

Title: To change the art industry, NFTs must be more secure
Post by: RSRS on July 04, 2021, 07:39:57 AM
2021 has already seen a number of eye-catching milestones reached for the nascent nonfungible token (NFT) market, which has seen an increase in value of 2,100% from Q4 2020, with consumers spending over $2 billion. While headlines have been dominated by record-breaking sales, what’s often overlooked is the growing demand from new investors. According to NonFungible, which tracks NFT transactions, there were 73,000 NFT buyers and 33,000 NFT sellers in Q1. Although these numbers may seem impressive, they are in fact relatively small compared to the global art market, which was valued at $64.7 billion in 2018, with the United States, China and the United Kingdom accounting for 84% of the global market.

The traditional infrastructure for the art market, dominated by dealerships and auction houses, already seemed dated in an increasingly online and globalized world, where demand in emerging markets for this asset was only going to grow. People will probably look back on the COVID-19 pandemic as a catalyst for disrupting the existing art-market infrastructure. Meanwhile, the NFT market does provide a glimpse into how smart-contract technology can be applied to ensure third parties and middlemen who would normally demand their cut can be removed. As things stand, however, the current infrastructure has too many flaws and too much potential for user error for it to realistically act as an alternative to the current methods for verification, distribution, auction and certification of ownership.

Related: Hype is over: How NFTs and art will benefit from each other moving forward

Today, there is no way to know for certain who the actual human creator was by looking at the data contained in an NFT. The result is a growing number of NFT forgeries and cases where a scammer creates an NFT and presents it as work by a particular known artist. One quick Google search on that topic shows that NFT forgeries are a rapidly growing problem. In some cases, the scammers take an image of an actual art piece from the artist, turn it into an NFT and then sell it as if they were the artist themselves.

Additionally, when an NFT has significant associated content or data, such as an image, that data is not stored on a blockchain. Rather, the NFT contains a link to the data, most frequently through a hyperlink on the internet. If the data (e.g., image) at the end of that hyperlink were to change or disappear, there is no way to know or prove from blockchain data what the actual image was that was associated and purchased with the NFT.

So, there is no way to protect the permanence of the NFT data. Shocking, but true. That means that the actual image or data associated with the NFT could be changed or deleted, thereby destroying the value of the NFT. There’s also the potential for user error, where people miscopy long complicated addresses or suffer man-in-the-middle attacks that could potentially result in millions of dollars being sent to the wrong address or stolen forever.

 Sourch (https://cryptonews.net/en/news/nft/952259/)
Title: Re: To change the art industry, NFTs must be more secure
Post by: Sumaiya2 on July 06, 2021, 07:25:50 PM
Individual NFTs have continued to sell for millions of dollars; just last week, world wide web creator Tim Berners-Lee sold an NFT representing the web's source. Meanwhile, in the wider market, data from NFT transaction tracker NonFungible suggests that interest is not going away. Buyers have still outnumbered sellers every week since
Title: Re: To change the art industry, NFTs must be more secure
Post by: Proton on July 06, 2021, 10:57:00 PM
The NFT market is constantly evolving and expanding, this will undoubtedly lead to counterfeiting and fraud.  But the security of these tokens will also be constantly monitored.  This is just the beginning.