a16z Podcast - NFTs, Explained
Episode Date: November 25, 2021Given all the activity and interest recently around crypto and web3, as well as in upcoming holidays and art events, we’re re-running our episode all about NFTs (from March 2021) -- where we covered... everything you need or want to know about NFTs. You can also find a curated list of resources to learn all about NFTs at future.com/nftcanon. That list, and this episode, has something for everyone -- from artists and creators and other builders to big companies and institutions or just anyone seeking to understand or even explain to others NFTs.Here, we’ve cut through the noise around NFTs to share the signal, covering everything from: what NFTs are and the underlying crypto big picture, before we dig into specifically what forms they take;common myths and misconceptions -- from confusing overlaps with other concepts to addressing commentary like it’s “just a JPG” or that it’s just hypeto the question of energy use, also covering briefly how NFTs workproviding a quick overview of the players/ ecosystemand throughout, covering various applications too.Joining host Sonal Chokshi are Jesse Walden, now of Variant Fund, and formerly co-founder of Mediachain Labs, which was acquired by Spotify; and Linda Xie, now of Scalar Capital, and formerly an early product manager at Coinbase. As a reminder, NONE of the following should be taken as investment advice, for more important information please see a16z.com/disclosures.[If you’re also interested in DAOs (which we touch on briefly in this episode), we just recently published a list of readings -- in the vein of our famous crypto canon resource, then NFT canon, and now DAO canon -- all about DAOs. It’s for anyone seeking to understand, build, and otherwise get involved with these “decentralized autonomous organizations” -- which represent the future of community, coordination, work, and much more… so we’ve curated resources on this list for people at different levels of interest, from dipping one’s toes in to going deep. You can find that at future.com/daocanon.]This episode was originally released in March 2021: https://future.a16z.com/podcasts/nfts-explainer/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi everyone. Welcome to the A6 and Z podcast. I'm Sonal. We have some special new episodes coming for you soon in our new season. But given all the activity and interest recently in crypto and web three, as well as holidays and upcoming art events, we are rerunning our episode all about NFTs from nine months ago back in March in case you missed it. You can also find a curated list of resources to learn all about NFTs at future.com slash NFT Canon. That list and this episode has something for everyone from Artists and
creators and other builders to big companies and institutions or just anyone seeking to understand
or even just explain to others NFTs. If you're also interested in DAWS, which we touch on briefly in
this episode, we just recently published a list of readings all about DAWS. It's for anyone seeking
to understand, build, and otherwise get involved with these decentralized autonomous organizations,
which represent the future of community, coordination, work, and much more. So we've curated
resources for people at different levels of interest from dipping one's toes into going deep.
You can find that at future.com slash Dow. That's DAO Canon. Again, that's future.com slash Dow Canon and
future.com slash NFT Canon. And now onto this episode, we cut through all the noise around
NFTs to share what precisely NFTs are, as well as the underlying crypto big picture.
Before we dig into specifically what forms they take, then we cover common myths and misconceptions
from confusing overlaps with other concepts to tackling commentary like it's just a JPEG or that
it's just hype to addressing the question of energy use.
Also covering briefly how NFTs work, providing a quick overview of the players in ecosystem
and throughout discussing various applications too.
My expert guests are Jesse Walden, now a variant fund and formerly co-founder of Media Chain Labs,
which is acquired by Spotify, and Linda Shea, now of Scalar Capital,
and formerly an early product manager at Cainbase, both are good friends of A6 and Z crypto.
As a reminder, none of the following should be taken as investment advice.
For more important information, please see A6NZ.com slash disclosures.
So let's just start with a quick set of definitions.
What is an NFT?
So NFT stands for a non-fungible token, which is just the term used to describe a unique digital
asset whose ownership is tracked on a blockchain.
This can be really broad set of assets from digital goods like virtual lands and artwork to a claim on physical assets like real estate or clothing items.
What I heard you say there is not just digital because it can cover something physical as well that you can essentially represent as NFTs.
Yeah. It's a really, really broad space. It's exciting to see NFT art really take off, but this covers a lot of different industries as well.
So I like to focus on the digital side of things a little more in a metaphor.
that I would offer as a definition is NFTs are a way to make digital files
ownable. Instead of a financial asset, you can now own a digital media asset on the internet.
And that's why the file metaphor is apt. You can now own a JPEG, own an MP3.
And what you're essentially doing when you create an NFT, it's sort of like metaphorically
uploading that file to the blockchain, such that anyone can track its provenance and attribution.
So Dixon described this in a recent blog post, very simply put, as NFT,
are blockchain-based records that uniquely represent pieces of media or in your words, Jesse,
a file.
One more word to focus on is the fungible in the non-fungible token, which is that you can
represent these items uniquely.
I just want to really emphasize because, again, when you think of a dollar that's fungible
or even a single Bitcoin arguably is fungible, but something fungible is interchangeable,
replaceable.
It doesn't matter what dollar I have as long as I have a dollar.
But in this case, something is non-fungible means it's super unique.
And we can go into like what that means in a moment.
But before we do, let's talk now about the underlying crypto aspect of NFTs,
not the specific crypto protocols, but maybe more broadly, what are the properties of
crypto?
Because we don't want to make this conversation about crypto per se, but about how crypto enables
NFTs.
When you think about the physical world, sometimes it involves a notary, like a third-party
bank.
It involves someone in the art world, like provenance tracking through certificates, this
ability to own and track a digital file without a third-party player intermediary is key?
That's right. You depend on the bank to maintain the ledger or the title to a property that you buy.
There's some property registry that the state or the city maintains. So you're always dependent
on a third-party to track the attribution of ownership, how the title changes hands, how the bank
statements get updated. And Bitcoin changed the game because it enabled this public decentralized
ledger where no one party is in control. And yet, each
individual owner of a Bitcoin is able to verify their ownership using cryptography. As a result,
you don't have to depend on a single third party to verify ownership. Yeah, middlemen are tracking
ownership for people of all these different assets and they're taking fees for the service.
They're preventing some people from using the platform. And what's really powerful with crypto is
you have all these open protocols that you can kind of plug into each other. And so when you have
NFTs, you can plug them into decentralized systems and be able to trade these NFTs with anyone
in the world and have that be instantaneous.
You can also imagine
plugging into using your NFT
as collateral. So let's say you have
video game items that worth a lot of money,
you can actually imagine taking a loan
out from them. And so NFTs on the
blockchain allow anyone to permissionlessly
own issue, trade them.
And the other property of
being able to track provenance, which
has essentially a built-in secondary
market to it, which is this idea
that not only do you track the provenance,
but you can actually track the provenance,
the financial benefits that accrue as a result of that built-in secondary market.
This is particularly true in cases of digital artworks, etc.
Yeah, the secondary resale of an asset can be programmatically constructed
such that any time the NFT changes hands,
a portion of the resale value goes back to the original creator.
And by when you say programmatically, automatically,
that is a distinct property of crypto, specifically smart contracts,
that you can do that type of programmability of a contract.
Yeah, it can be totally automated, totally transparent, contrast that with royalties in the music industry, which is like a completely opaque system with many layers of middlemen that are each taking a cut, right? It's a wildly more efficient architecture. That's uniquely made possible by blockchains and smart contracts. The blockchain is really good at tracking the history of things. So no, if you send me one Bitcoin, everyone can see that you have one less and I have one more. And the history of that transaction is forever sort of enthrined on the blockchain. The same is true of non-farmes.
tangible tokens in that when they're incepted or minted, they're signed by the creator using
their cryptographic keys, which now enables anyone to see, okay, this file was signed by
this creator or this person. That message is constructed in the same way any other cryptocurrency
transaction is constructed. Thereafter, that NFT lives on the blockchain alongside all
other transactions and everyone can see it. And so if that NFT changes hands and say Linda buys
my NFT, everyone can see I transferred ownership to Linda. And as a result, we start to build this
very rich history of the interactions people have with media on the internet. Whereas today,
think about an image you see on Instagram. You could screenshot that, you know, crop it and then
paste it on another platform. Say like repaste it on Facebook. And as soon as you do that,
you break its entire history, its entire provenance. You no longer know who made it, what it's
about, where it originated. And with this new sort of architecture, we can,
can now sort of have a Z access into the entire history of any piece of media on the internet.
And through that channel, that information flows, value can also flow.
Concretely for artists, this means an artist today who may have created a work 20 years ago
and that work completely appreciates in value.
But the last owner is the only one who benefits from that.
If the programmatic arrangement is that that artist continues to get value, they can always get paid
and this built-in secondary market.
Like if it later becomes millions of dollars,
versus $500 for a painting,
then you're getting money back each time it is sold,
which is not possible before.
And I think important to note,
that's just one of the possible arrangements
that can exist when the rules around monetizing creativity
can be expressed as code
by any developer and any creator on the internet.
The ownership history is really important.
The ownership history is something that is really uniquely accessible
on the blockchain because everyone can see,
and therefore some items might be more meaningful to certain people.
Let's say, like magic,
The Gathering has a tournament where this deck of cards actually won this tournament.
You might want to buy these set of cards because they're historical and the winner of these
games actually use this deck to play.
From the art perspective, just imagine your favorite musician or creator owning a piece of
art.
And now that ownership is just tracked in the blockchain, that piece of art might become
more valuable to you because of who's owned it in the past.
We also have a lot of projects that are working on fractionalizing NFT art.
So splitting up these NFTs into multiple pieces, and these individual pieces are also tracked on the blockchain, and you can trade them through decentralized exchanges.
So it's really powerful when you can plug these NFTs into all these different crypto protocols, because in a traditional system, these middlemen aren't plugging themselves into all these other companies and middlemen.
You can kind of freely do whatever you want with these NFTs, which I think is a really big difference.
Yeah, I think it's important to contrast the way NFTs work to the way the traditional web works.
So with social media today, when you share a file or share a piece of media, you upload the file to the platform.
And what's actually happening under the hood is your copy-pacing ownership of the file to the platform.
What I mean is that somewhere along the way you signed a terms of service that allows for the platform to monetize that piece of content as they see fit.
And maybe they give you a cut of the revenue, maybe not.
but the platform gets to make that call.
And they also get to make the call on how that content is consumed.
And there's not a whole lot of innovation going on there
because any developer who plugs in to try to innovate
has been shut down in the past.
Now, contrast that to NFTs,
and I'm going to run with this metaphor of uploading a file to the blockchain.
Keep going. I love someone who owns a metaphor.
Do it.
Okay, so with this metaphor, if you're uploading files to the blockchain
and then those files become NFTs and they behave
in the way that other crypto assets behave,
that means that they're permissionlessly accessible to anyone, anywhere with an internet connection.
The implications are that any third-party developer can then innovate on the way that media is consumed,
like how the audience sees it, how people can interact with it or program it.
So one way to think about what's happening with NFTs is we're building this universal open media library,
on top of which any developer can build the next Spotify or build the next Instagram or build the next Facebook.
and when there's a lot more competition,
there's going to be a lot of benefit to consumers
and likely to creators as well
because, as Linda mentioned,
all of this can happen
without the traditional middlemen taking a cut
of the value that's flowing between the creators and consumers.
That's great.
Let's get a little specific, though.
Let's actually talk about the forms NFTs are taking specifically.
I think this is a great place to help tease apart what's hype,
what's real, as is the premise of this show.
And so far, I'm actually having a hard time,
and I have someone who's been covering this space.
I mean, Bitcoin since very early on, Ethereum since very early on, NFTs since very early on.
And I am honestly confused myself.
So maybe you guys can just help break it down.
Just to quickly recap, Jesse, you're saying any media file.
Linda's saying any good, digital or physical, that leaves pretty much anything.
So specific examples include things like art.
It can be in games, in music.
There are audio NFTs.
This has been really interesting to me lately.
There are blog posts.
Like I see people on our friend Dennis's site.
talking about making NFTs of blog posts.
Brian Flynn wrote about token-gated newsletters.
And another interesting example recently.
It was self-proclaimed first, but likely true.
Someone wrote about how they created the first ever tokenized,
crowdfunded equity research report.
Can you guys just quickly help tease apart what is and isn't an NFT?
It seems like everything is.
I really think that anything in the world can be an NFT,
as in anyone creates something that is unique that can be owned.
the problem with physical goods is that you do have to have someone custody it. So there is a process
behind that of having to make sure that you can audit that in the real world and maybe multiple
people own it and it can't be moved just by one person. So there are pieces to that. But
otherwise, I find it to be an extremely broad category. We've seen really cool things come about where
we've had the token gated newsletters, which you mentioned basically needing to have a certain
number of tokens in order to access this newsletter. And people are doing like token permission
chats where these tokens are required to enter the chat room and start talking so you know
everyone has like a level of skin in the game. You have to own like a certain amount of tokens
in order to enter these groups. It proves that you have some sort of ownership into this community
that can be adjusted over time. The idea is that even one day that there could be Dallas
form where token holders can vote on how many tokens are required to enter this newsletter or
chat group or something. And that piece, it's kind of tangential to NFTs. I don't
necessarily think that social tokens themselves are NFTs because sometimes people are creating
these tokens that they've minted like a million of them. But if the creator of this group is
issuing individual badges or unique items within that, then that can be an NFT. Can you say more on
what you mean by social tokens? Yeah, social tokens are just a really broad category of tokens
that are issued by individuals or communities. So sometimes it's other terms to use like personal
token, community token, creator token. But social token is kind of the term that encompasses all
of it. And there's just a bunch of different experiments happening in the space. So we've seen
people tokenize their time. So one of these tokens equals one hour of their time. And that
becomes freely traded. We've also seen someone like RAC, who's a Grammy Award winning recording
artist, tokenize his social token. And his token holders get access to this private discord group.
And then they receive like all these additional benefits. And he retroactively distributed to
his supporters. So this is a way that creators can interact with and reward their early supporters.
So it's a really broad category and it can really be anything associated with the individual or
community. And how is social tokens similar and adjacent to NFTs? And then when is it not
NFTs? Can you help distinguish there just to help the understanding of what is and isn't an
NFT? Yeah. Sometimes social tokens can be NFTs and that a creator is issuing some unique piece of
artwork directly to their fans. But in a lot of cases, social tokens can
can also just be fungible tokens. So like RAC token, they're all fungible. So you can basically
hold like a certain level of them. And that can always be traded and bought back. And it doesn't
really matter which RIC token you're purchasing. So those are kind of more adjacent. And I think the
reason why social tokens and NFTs get lumped together a lot of times is just because it enables the
creator economy, enables creators to engage with their fans directly. And so these are often tied
pretty closely together. Right. But basically the bottom line is,
If it is fungible, it's not an NFT.
And of course, if it's non-fungible, hence non-fungible token, then it is an NFT.
Yeah.
I think the line between fungible and non-fungible tokens is blurry for a reason.
And that's because the interplay between the two is enormous.
You can take a non-fundable token and turn it into fungible tokens by fractionalizing it.
And then you can make those fungible tokens, which represent a piece of the original NFT,
you can make those into a social token.
So there's this token called B20, which is a fungible token, and it represents a claim on some of Beeple's NFTs, which an investor bought and essentially fractionalized ownership to.
And now that that B20 token exists, it can be programmed into all sorts of other values.
So in addition to owning a piece of a Beeple, you can imagine some third party spinning up, say, a Discord server and saying you need a B20 token to come in here and hang out.
That's an example where it started with a non-fungible token.
Beeple created it.
Then a collector bought Beeple's non-fungible token,
fractionalized it into a fungible ERC20 token.
That's the B-20 token.
And third-party developers can remix and add new experiences.
Linda touched on all this,
but the interplay between the two is important to note
that you can easily take a non-fungible token
and fractionalize it into fungible tokens
that then can become these social or community tokens.
And so that's a fun sort of design space
to explore. I mean, we're talking so far about kind of digital versions of what already happens
in the real world, being able to do things in different ways. But if you think about what's not
possible right now in the real world, the idea of fractional ownership is super important and
goes to the things that crypto can uniquely do. Because right now, if you want to have
factually owned an artwork, I mean, I guess there are some very clugy websites where you could go
and kind of combine resources with somebody. But guess what? You can't really split a physical
artwork. So it kind of reminds me of that story. I don't know. It was like a Bible story.
about like splitting the baby, like, who's a real mother?
But the point is, like, you can enable fractional ownership.
I still am stunned at this idea with top shots
that you can essentially buy and own a moment,
a favorite hit moment in a physical sports game.
And by the way, Linda, I've been meaning to text you about this,
but I've been addicted to watching Cloy crashlining on you, the K drama.
Honestly, when I think of all these amazing moments in a show like that,
I know this sounds nutty, but what if people could bid and own
moments in their favorite TV shows as if it's theirs.
Even if millions of people can watch it.
The idea that you can own it and it's part of your identity is so freaking awesome.
That's what I love about crypto.
You can have these concepts that you never really would have thought about otherwise,
about being to own moments and media and people's lives.
Imagine like YouTube creators streaming what's happening to their life
and be able to own really exciting moments of it.
I mean, there's so much possibilities there.
It's really exciting to see people become so creative with NFTs and what you can own.
On that note, let's actually switch to talking about what's overblown or not and tackle some common myths and misconceptions, everything from energy to whether it's a hype cycle.
And of course, we'll keep talking about the applications. But let's first dig more deeply into what it means to own something digital.
Start with this common phrase, it's just a JPEG. How would you guys address that comment? Like, oh, my God, someone spent effing $69 million for just a JPEG.
I mean, Jesse, you're saying it's a file. Guess what? On the internet, files are pretty worthless.
and infinitely replicable.
So I would say that the number of times a file has been reproduced on the internet
is directly correlated to the value of that file's NFT,
meaning the more times a piece of media gets shared online,
the more social value it has.
To make this concrete, it's helpful to think about a very well-known piece of
traditional art like the Mona Lisa,
where the Mona Lisa has been reproduced probably a zillion times.
It's on every t-shirt postcard sold at the Louvre.
You can see it anywhere on the internet.
Yet there's one Mona Lisa in the Louvre museum.
And ownership of that piece of artwork is incredibly coveted, incredibly valuable.
I have to admit, I'm getting a little tired of the Mona Lisa analogy, but it is a useful one.
The key point, what I really heard you say, which is so counterintuitive, is that something is more valuable, the more that it is replicated.
And in fact, it just makes me think of how in general, as the world of the web became more about abundance versus
scarcity. You know, the long tail is that you can have infinite choice on the web. It is really
fascinating how people have been, when they went past the limits of the blockbuster shelves in the
physical goods world, it's interesting that Netflix would do things like binge seasons and drops
that kind of created this digital scarcity, like a limited edition of fact. Like this thing is
going to be on for three months and then it disappears. So it's another analogy of this interesting
relationship between something not being necessarily rare or scarce.
and in fact, even infinitely replicable in the case of files and JPEGs,
but you can enforce this digital owning or even a piece of it,
if you want to go into the fractional ownership bit.
And that is incredibly unique.
That's the idea.
You're not owning to try to be the only person who can access a given JPEG or a piece of media.
Rather, you want to own the piece of media that everyone else sees.
Memes travel the internet at a rapid clip.
They get shared infinitely.
you can now own a piece of internet history or the most spiral meme.
And I think very soon we'll see that these owners are credited socially on platforms
where that work is distributed.
We're seeing that play out with Cryptopunks, which is just one of the earliest NFT projects.
And we saw two Cryptopunks sold for $7.5 million each.
One of the sellers being Dylan Fields, who's the CEO and co-founder of Figma.
And what's really interesting about this is, yes, anyone could just copy this image.
He himself, sorry to interrupt you, he himself could copy his image because he had it as his profile photo for a while and he had to like, he didn't have to, but he chose to take it off his Twitter profile, which I thought was so funny, but keep going.
Yeah, exactly. So anyone can copy this. But if you actually look at the Cryptopunk NFT itself, you'll see who owned this. And the fact that somebody had owned this so early on, it's almost become the status symbol where people want to demonstrate that they can prove their ownership really early on in this space. And so that ownership history also really matters, being able to discover an artist.
artist or creator really early on and being like one of the first supporters and having that
tracked on the blockchain. Future times when that is sold, you can prove that you were this early
adopter and that is very valuable to people. There's a great analogy I heard to extend what you said
even further. But basically, if you think of the play card next to an artwork, like at MoMA or some
famous museum, it tells a description of what the art is, the materials, the date, the artist,
if it's not someone anonymous. And then it says at the very bottom, you know, sometimes on very
small letters, who owns it or who it's lent by someone on this collection, so-and-so.
And not everyone pays attention to that because most people just care about the art.
And then some people actually care about who owns it.
But now you're doing that exact same thing, but on the internet where the whole world can see
it, not just like going physically to MoMA and seeing it, or even to use Jesse's
analogy, Mona Lisa and seeing it in the Louvre.
It's like not only can you have that kind of insider notion of the ownership, but you
can make it more outsider-facing by letting everyone see it.
That is pretty powerful.
Yeah, developers are going to mean into that.
Because all that data about who owns it, where it came from, what its history online is, that's just an API call away.
And right now, again, it's very difficult for developers to find all that information on Web2 platforms because the history of media is not tracked architecturally in the way that blockchain is track it.
So it's like a hundred times easier for developers to surface that information.
And that's why I think you'll see that little placard in the museum.
You'll see the digital equivalent of that on all social services in the near future.
Did you guys see Matt Levine on Twitter?
He said this line that NFTs are a new form of tradable ostentation
rather than a new form of tradable ownership.
Did you guys have any reactions to that?
I mean, ostentation is one of the reasons people might collect NFTs,
but it's not just the speculative value or being ostentatious about being the owner.
Increasingly over time, I think owners of NFTs will start to realize more and more
sort of compounding utility as developers build new spaces for you to bring your digital property.
For example, today, you can buy a piece of digital art as an NFTs,
NFT, and you can bring it into a virtual world like Cryptovoxels or DeCentraland and display it
there. And that's a very early example of a third-party developer who has nothing to do with
the creator of that NFT being able to build a new virtual experience. That's just the tip of
the iceberg. There's, you know, any third-party developer can then build on top of Cryptovoxels
because it too is open source and permissionless. And so what you start to see is this sort of
Lego block approach to building new experiences where developers can build more with less and
that innovation compounds much more quickly. And so that statement undervalues the possible
utilitarian nature of being an owner. Yeah, I don't really agree with that statement because I think
it dismisses a lot of these cases. And if we even talk about the more traditional stuff like
NFTs representing tickets or financial assets or real estate, these are just more efficient
ways of transferring and without having as many paperwork and middlemen involved. And so this is
a net benefit to society versus people trying to display their wealth. I'm so glad I asked you guys,
because again, the premise of the show is to tease apart what's hype, what's real. And it is
interesting that someone whose work I deeply respect has an interesting observation and to hear
you guys push back on that. What do you make of the comparisons that people are making to the
ICO boom? What would your response be to that? ICO being initial coin offerings playing off
the term for IPO, obviously initial public offering. But in that case, it was more risky. People
argued because an ICO was before the thing even existed, like at least in an IPO, the
company exists. By the way, our friend Nick Tamano made a simple observation that an
NFT is a concrete product, a digital good, not a promise about the future, which I thought
was a good argument. Yeah, I like that. Any thoughts on what the hype, what's real on,
oh no, we're in another ICO boom. It's like tokens all over again. It just reminds me a lot of
in 2017 when a lot of people came into the space and the word ICO was thrown out a lot and
there was definitely a lot of hype around that. But through that process, a lot of really
incredible projects came out of crypto. And a lot of people who joined the space ended up staying
because they saw that it was a lot more than just get rich quick. And there were communities
and really unique ways of creating value in this world. So yes, there are a lot of people that
have come into this space. I want to just make some money off of it. But there are a lot of
really creative people that have joined the space that are going to stick around and experiment with
what's happening and really build some things that we have just never seen before. And it is nice
that this time it's artists who have just worked so hard
and are getting rewarded for this type of work.
Someone like people who has been working on this craft
for so many years, this is something that people are valuing.
I mean, on people specifically,
his work was digital from the beginning anyway,
but he's essentially creating,
and this goes back to the definition,
this kind of one of a kindness,
because it is an NFT, it is unique and trackable that way.
I do love that.
But there's no question there's like a hype cycle going on.
We're at that moment and whatever, the Gartner,
curve or whatever framework you want to use.
There's always a trough of disillusionment phase.
I guess I just need a little bit more to understand,
okay, yes, this is very exciting.
But right now, in this moment in time,
how do we assess that it's working or not working?
I think the question you're getting at is,
what is valuable?
Which NFTs are valuable?
And the answer to that question is kind of like
answering the question, what is art?
And, you know, my answer to that question
would be whatever the beholder thinks is art.
And similarly, whatever the market thinks is valuable.
is a valuable NFT.
And that's why I think you're seeing such a wide-ranging experiments
in what can be transacted as NFTs from blog posts to digital art.
And there are a lot of niche groups that want to own, you know,
an item that's culturally relevant to them for various reasons,
whether it's for speculation, the idea that they might be able to resell it in the future
or, you know, because they just want their name on this sort of digital placard
next to the item to say, I supported this creator, right?
Like, I wanted to support their work.
So there are a lot of different reasons people might value NFTs,
and there's a lot of different subcultures and value systems
that, you know, comprise this market.
And that's why it's sort of expanding in all directions.
So the buzz is not necessarily a bad thing.
One of the things that came up a lot in the early days of the history of NFTs,
starting with CryptoKitties, was the scaling problem.
And the fact that Ethereum was not ready for that level of excitement yet.
pushed a lot of solutions into thinking about scaling.
So some of the hype cycle in 2017 actually led to good infrastructure improvements and
the installation of things we needed.
I mean, it definitely makes me think that media chain was just a bit too early, actually.
I remember even before you guys founded media chain, always having this problem in the creator
world of having to track libraries of digital assets, it was very difficult to find out
because the information was not coupled with the JPEG itself.
Forget even who owns it and who to pay.
Like, you don't even know who made it.
And this is true of memes, everything on the internet, which, you know, is about remix culture and extensibility and composing things and combining them.
Yeah, a lot of the ideas that are being realized, say, around NFTs are ideas we were exploring back then.
And there were two critical things missing from the ecosystem at that time.
One was the ability to easily create a token.
That's uniquely enabled by smart contracts and smart contract platforms like Ethereum and Flow and others.
The other thing that was missing was markets for these digital.
assets. So we now live in a world where roughly 10% of Americans own cryptocurrency. And so the
idea that digital assets have value is sort of a prerequisite for digital media assets like
NFTs having value. To Linda's point earlier, the 2017 market was a prerec for the NFT market
today. So the markets had to come first. Markets drive, you know, they're volatile and they drive
these speculative frenzies, but they also drive infrastructure and mental models that
stick. That's a perfect segue to the next thing I wanted to talk to you guys about, which is the
broader taxonomy of the players and the ecosystem that's already emerging around all this.
And before we do, let's quickly talk about how they work to help make it concrete, like step
one, two, three to minting an NFT, trading it, doing whatever. Okay. Step one would just be
deciding to put your work as a representation on the blockchain. And so minting involves really
interacting with the smart contract and submitting that. There are different market
places that try to make that really easy for you to do it. And so some of them will have a button
that you'll click to mint this process and you can select different attributes of like what's the
name of this piece of artwork, what's kind of the royalties involved if there are secondary
sales, like how much do you want involved? So a lot of these will make it super easy for you to go
through that process. I think the hardest part actually is getting set up with a wallet and
onboarding yourself into accepting cryptocurrency in that piece. But there are marketplaces now that
make it accessible. And some marketplaces will also maybe have you go through some onboarding
process. And so they might have some due diligence on the artist and making sure this is
real artwork and not copied by some other artists and making sure it's really high quality
pieces. And there are others that are just like, hey, anyone can mint this. So it's quite a
spectrum right now. That's great. But I got to set up my metamask and like, what does that even
mean? Can you guys explain the wallet part too as well? Because one theoretically does not necessarily
have to actually interact with cryptocurrencies directly.
So if you guys could break down really quickly, that bit too.
Sure, I can take a step with that.
So the concept of a crypto wallet was down to what's called the public and private key pair.
So basically you have a public address on the blockchain, which is where your assets,
your stuff is associated.
So Sonal has a public address.
And you can tweet that out and say, hey, I'm Sonal.
Here's my public address.
And here's all my stuff.
and your Bitcoin can be at that address on Ethereum.
You'd have a different address,
and all your stuff on the Ethereum blockchain
would be associated with your public key.
And then there's the private key.
The private key is what unlocks the transfer of assets in your wallet.
So you need the private key to unlock stuff at your public address.
And that's the concept of a crypto wallet.
Metamask is the most popular wallet for Ethereum.
And it's a browser extension.
you can install it on any popular browser.
And essentially what it's doing is it's setting you up
with a public address for the Ethereum blockchain
and a private address.
And what's critical to note is that cryptographic key pair,
it doesn't belong to Medabask.
It belongs to you.
Metamask never sees the key pair.
They don't have any of the information.
It's yours.
And that comes with a lot of responsibility
because if you lose your private key,
you lose all your stuff.
It's kind of like cash in your wallet.
And that's why it's called a wallet,
even though it's a little bit of a misnomer
because you can only do so many things with their physical wallet.
But I think the reason that name is stuck
is that your cryptographic wallet
behaves like a physical wallet
and that if you lose it, all your cash is known.
Okay, so now continuing the process.
So we understand now how the wallets work,
the browser extension for the wallet.
Some platforms can let you literally create,
sorry, mint an NFT because you can create the artwork
in any form you like or whatever the object is
or digital asset or file.
Now, what happens after you mint it?
What's the next thing that happens?
So you can put a name on it.
You can specify program terms, you know, what kind of royalties.
Different systems may have different options.
Some of them themselves take 10%.
Others, you can program in like as this increases in this much value.
I've seen people do creative stuff like the artwork reveals itself.
The further you go along the bonding curve, like they're doing creative stuff with the art
itself, kind of interacting.
So it's not just like a static piece of art that just happens to be going through this chain.
What happens after the minting?
You can do different things depending on what you want to do with your NFT.
So once you mince on these marketplaces, you can just have it listed and try to share
this link with other people and have them bid on the piece of art.
You can set a price.
You can have people bid and then accept different bids.
Or you could just have this created for yourself.
And let's say you want to make some world in a virtual land and display your artwork in a virtual
art gallery and just place your artwork there.
There's all kinds of different things you can do with it.
If you think this piece is really valuable, I've actually seen people talk about swapping
NFTs. So different artists are like swapping with each other. I've also seen people put up
their artist collateral and then get out a loan for it. So you can really do whatever you want with
this. But the most common basic thing I've seen is just people selling their artwork and
someone purchasing it and then maybe storing that like on their virtual land or having it
displayed on their profile. And there's like a social element to it. People talk about it a lot like,
hey, I just purchased this piece of art and they'll talk about on Twitter. And there's an app that
aggregates purchases from all of these different marketplaces and displays it almost like an
Instagram feed. So you can have like a social element to who's purchasing what, who owns what
and have people form communities around it. I also often wondered if there will be like a Pinterest
for NFTs where even if you're not the owner, you can kind of collect it. Like one of the things
that I use Pinterest for is it's sometimes aspirational stuff I would never ever buy. And it's just like
having Pinterest boards is a way for me to collect it in a different way. Like I wonder if that would
even happen. And if people would create like fees for doing that as well. I don't know if you guys
have seen that yet, but I wonder about that. I could see something like that happening.
And also just the factualization aspect to it, you can cut it up to really, really, really,
really tiny pieces. And maybe people can own just a really tiny element of this piece as you're
looking through your Pinterest board or something. So what you guys just described as all these
different steps, there's a whole ecosystem of players that have now emerged and are continuing to
emerge. We've already named a few sites for showcasing an online collection displays,
like online galleries. We have curated galleries coming up. We have marketplaces.
We have other tools for managing details. How would you break down the taxonomy? Give me a map
and the terrain. Yes, there's vertical marketplaces, right? Where there's marketplaces for
like curated art or for certain types of collectibles. And then there's horizontal
marketplaces like OpenC where that's more of a search box for all NFTs. And the reason they can do that
is all these NFTs live on the blockchain. It's completely open. So they can query the blockchain
and aggregate all of them. And you can find literally pretty much every NFT on a horizontal marketplace
like OpenC. Which is great because not everybody knows how to interface with crypto. This is like
the way the web itself evolved. Right. And then each of these kinds of marketplace is both
vertical and horizontal, more often than not allow creators to mint on the platform. Simple way to think
about there's both supply and demand and you can either get it in the vertical form, which is
specialized or horizontal, which is sort of everything. One really interesting phenomenon that's
happening on the demand side of the market is you're starting to see these really interesting
collector organizations sprout up. So crypto makes it really easy to send value, like as easy
as sending an email. As a result, people are pooling value in interesting ways in order to
participate in this market. One really cool experiment is this thing called Flamingo Dow.
Dow stands for decentralized autonomous organization.
The core idea is you can pool resources with anyone with a crypto wallet,
send money into this smart contract that acts as sort of like a bank account,
and then that bank account can go and buy NFTs.
The group can buy NFTs.
And so what that kind of looks like is maybe something like a fund
or you could call it a gallery that's acquiring work.
And by being in that collection,
the creator is gaining distribution to the audience of collectors slash investors
who pooled resources in the first place.
So that's another really interesting phenomenon
that's uniquely crypto-enabled.
And I think we're going to see a lot more of that.
I do too, and I love that
because one of my favorite things
in the creator economy in general
is the way collectives can emerge,
both ephemeral and permanently.
I have like a whole tweet storm about this,
but I think it's super powerful
to think about what happens
when you unlock that kind of coordination.
Keep going.
Yeah, I mentioned vertical and horizontal marketplaces.
There's also adjacent just media platforms
was like, we touched on Dennis's Project Mirror, which is a blogging platform where anyone can
mint their blog post as an NFT. And the question, why would you want to mint sort of a blog post
or an essay as an NFT? Yes, thank you for answering that. If you're an investigative journalist,
for example, there's not a whole lot of great tools for you to monetize as an independent right now.
Subscription can be less conducive to long-form journalism. And what's kind of cool about Mirror
is similarly to the prior idea of people pooling money.
It allows for a writer's audience to pool resources
in a form of a crowd fund.
Hey, I want to see this investigative report written.
And here's the money to do it.
And as a participant in that crowd fund,
you don't just become a patron of the creator or the writer.
You become an owner, a fractional owner of the NFT
that they produce when they publish that blog post.
and you can sort of analyze the psychology of one of these backers,
but I think it boils down to two things.
There's the idea of patronage, right?
You're being a patron of this creator and helping them get the work done.
But there's also this vague notion that in the future,
if this piece becomes very valuable, I'll be on the cap table of the post.
Like Elon Musk published this famous blog post,
the secret master plan of Tesla.
And just recently you saw Jack, the founder of Twitter,
sell his first tweet ever as an NFT for millions of dollars.
So you can see this idea going a lot further where new big ideas enter the world as blog posts
and people crowdfund those big ideas that they want to see happen in the world
and become part owners in the blog post that becomes the sort of canonical representation of that idea.
I saw Dylan Field post a thread a couple of days ago that I thought was wonderful talking about
some of the extension of ideas around NFTs.
He described like proof of fandom.
And we have lingo in the crypto world of proof of stake, proof of work.
and it was neat to have this idea of proof of fandom.
It kind of ties back to this idea of monetizing moments as well.
And in this case, you're talking about ways for creators to have their fans.
And one thing we've talked a lot about this podcast, I did a podcast with Kevin Kelly
about how you can actually invert the model of payments where it's not a creator selling,
but buyers and fans monetizing their attention.
And so the idea of that is super interesting because you can imagine fans and collectives,
like buying and owning these things.
and Dylan even went so far to point out even community as art in that example, which I thought was super
interesting. So that's an area that I'm really excited to see. I haven't really seen too many people
working on this yet, but the idea of having so many Dow members being able to vote how this
artwork looks and kind of have it be collective artwork, I was in this Dow called Saint Fame, and we
would vote on different parameters of the design of clothing items, and then this Dow would
manufacture them and ship them to people that purchased it. And so you had like this
group of people deciding what the design looks like. And you can imagine that anyone can join these
Tao's. It could even be anonymous people from all over the world. And so you can collectively
create or invest in things together, which is really exciting to me. Connie Chan, our partner,
has also been talked about influencer monetization. And she talks a lot about what happens in China
with live streaming and how a lot of fans will ask their audience, like, should I wear this today and do
that? And some of it can kind of veer on dystopian in some models. But in many ways, it's also
incredibly empowering that you can choose to monetize the things you want to and have models for doing it.
But right now, it's a platform that take all the money. So it's really interesting what you just
describe is that you could essentially do the exact same thing. But in this sense, you're creating
not just artworks, but you're actually creating collaborative decisions around a person's wardrobe or
a fashion line or however they want to develop products, even physical products based off of that,
which I think is super fun and interesting too. Just one last thing to add there, along the lines of
proof of fandom is this idea I've been calling patronage plus. So on Web 2, it's very easy to
become a patron of an artist or creator whose work you admire by subscribing to them on
substack or paying a subscription on Patreon. And what that essentially does is it gives you access to
their work, but it also allows being a supporter financially of the work itself. NFTs allow you
to do the same thing. In some cases, the NFT can give you access to a Discord or a newsletter,
and we touched on that. But the plus part of patronage
Plus is what's new and uniquely enabled by digital ownership.
And that is the possibility of being able to profit in the future from the resale of that
ownership to someone else, maybe as the creator's profile raises or the demand for their
work grows.
And I think that plus is really key because it's a very strong incentive to become a patron
in the first place.
So patronage plus may end up growing the market way bigger than patronage that we saw on Web 2.
What's so amazing about that is the golden age of art, many argue, like in the Renaissance era, Italy, Medici family, et cetera, people argue that patronage in the first place is what unlocked that. And so what you're describing is a more democratized form of patronage. And the plus is a way to really have this knock on effect over time, which is really investing and democratizing in a way that is accessible to everybody, because it's not just the rich Renaissance families that can do the funding of the arts. Yeah, it mixes patronage with capitalism.
Yeah. So there's a Dow called Yield Guild Games that I've been participating in active in.
There have been people in the Philippines who have been earning a living wage playing.
Like Jesse talked about you have these Tao's being able to own NFTs. And what they do,
they're a Dow of gamers, gamers from all over the world who are participating in these blockchain games.
And there's one really popular game called Axi Infinity. You've had these like Pokemon-like creatures
that battle each other and each of these are NFTs. And you can battle and earn
currency in this game. And sometimes these Pokemon creatures, like they might be too expensive because
they're so valuable. And so what we've actually seen in the Stao is players within the style
leasing out NFTs to other players. It's a really cool collective of people being able to join this
group of gamers. And one thing that they're doing right now is the Stow is investing in virtual land
in the games that they're playing because they're experts in these games themselves. And they're
actually developing like the land in these games as if just in like a physical world,
of developing real estate and making it better.
The idea is that they're going to be just owning tons and tons of virtual land.
One quick thing, again, the Dow is a decentralized autonomous organization.
People have often talked about crypto economies over time enabling these sort of
organizations because the history of the firm that's very much entrenched in a physical world,
not a digital world.
But why do these things have to exist as a Dow?
What's the point of that?
I'm asking because I'd want to know why a Dow specifically.
So I don't think everything has to be a Dow.
There are plenty of times where a company makes a lot more sense.
But what's really interesting about Dow's is there's a lot more transparency.
And so the funds that are managed by the Dow, it's completely transparent where funds are being
to and from.
Anyone can view the balance at any point in time.
As you can imagine, a traditional company, you don't have access to the balance sheet at all
periods of times.
And oftentimes they're just maybe released on a quarterly or annual basis.
So the Dow's, even the playing field, create more transparency.
There's lower barriers to entry in a lot of cases.
you don't even have to reveal your identity.
It'd be really hard to join a company
where no one knows who you actually are
that just fits very closely with the ethos of crypto,
of global, open kind of nature.
And by the way, to be very clear,
we don't mean identity isn't like anonymous
because you're pseudonymous technically.
Like people can actually trace who you are
without actually knowing who you are.
So now I'm going to help you guys
break down even more misconceptions for me.
Like we talked about just a JPEG,
what's so unique about a JPEG.
But there's actually a lot more misconceptions
and especially given recent buzz, all this commentary about the energy, the energy, like minting
is all this energy. This is obviously an artifact of people thinking in terms of Bitcoin,
which can be energy intensive. So can you help clarify the energy question when it comes
to NFTs? Well, I think that there are a lot of misconceptions around that. So, yeah,
proof of work does require energy, but not every blockchain is proof of work. Proof of work
involves physical miners actually verifying that these transactions happened.
And so it's just really energy intensive because you have to prove that you're expending
some sort of work to produce this output.
And so in Ethereum's case, they're migrating from proof of work to proof of stake,
which is kind of the equivalent of virtual mining.
So rather than spending, let's say, $1,000 on mining equipment, you're taking that $1,000
and locking it up into the system and being randomly selected to verify based off the
capital that you put in.
So it's just the virtual aspect of mining.
And you don't have to have the physical ones expending.
energy. And then increasingly we're also having more movement towards layer two, like protocols
built on top of Ethereum, because people do want to be less energy intensive when it comes to
verifying ownership on a blockchain. So there's going to be less of that narrative, I think,
going forward. Even proof of work mining gets more of a bad route than it deserves. It's
certainly true that it consumes a lot of energy. However, a lot of the miners who are doing the
proof of work locate in areas where there is latent capacity. So renewable
sources of energy that are untapped. For example, like hydropower, there's excess demand. Well, then it goes
into mining. For example, there's like natural gas emissions from oil fields, right? And that's gas
that is otherwise just going into the atmosphere, but instead can be burned to produce proof of work
proofs and earn Bitcoin. I'm not, you know, defending this practice, but I'm just noting that a lot of
these emissions are either sort of latent or a large part of the energy mix of proof of work mining
is from renewables. And that, again, is part of the conversation that's under-discussed.
I'm so glad you brought it up because the whole point of the show, again, is to give the nuance that
may or may not exist out there. I also think a lot of the noise out there about the energy consumption
of NFTs really fails to take into the sort of relative measure of energy consumption more broadly.
So do you think about something like Art Basel? There's a lot of very rich collectors who fly private
to Art Basel every year in order to collect work. And I don't know what the emissions of all those
private jets is, but I would expect it's a lot of CO2. And so to get into the game of quantifying
the specific emissions of an artist's work, I think is a very complex topic that's sort of
underappreciated in 140 or 280 characters on Twitter when you say, oh, this NFT caused X amount
of CO2 emissions, well, what about all the free ports? What about all the private jets flying
to Basel every year? So it's a very nuanced topic, and I don't think it's fair to creators for just
using these new tools, which are becoming more and more efficient to shut it down on the basis of
this very headline grabbing relative value measure. That's fantastic. By the way, I have been to
Art Basel, Miami, not the one in Switzerland in 2006. I did not fly in a private jet. I was a grad student.
I did not have that much money. But yes, I agree with you that it would be very slippery slope.
I also saw a tweet by Andrew Steinwald saying that actually these digital art are actually
really environmentally friendly in that you're not buying all these, like, physical supplies of
like cotton for canvases and wood for easels and oil. And then you have all these shipping costs
of moving this artwork to other people. There's always going to be aspects to anything that's
created that you can always analyze and look at what is not environmentally friendly about it.
You're absolutely right. And in fact, one of my absolute favorite artists, I bought a painting
from her. I went to her show in New Orleans. I flew. She shipped the art to me afterward.
It was such a process trying to bring it here and the shipping, just even the materials to pack it, like all of it.
It was intense and very complicated.
And in fact, I had to hire someone to help me open the crate because it's like screwed in and wood.
It was like not even possible.
There's energy used to like take the thing out of the box.
So I agree with you.
It's a very tricky game to start comparing on that front.
Okay.
This idea of permissionless, you use that phrase a lot.
If I were like a regulator in hearing that I would freak out and be like permissionless, that means all kinds of bad behavior and actors.
and blah, blah, blah, blah, how would you address the concerns about things being permissionless?
Even this idea that, you know, you can't even recover your key if it's lost, there's not
like someone who's holding that for you.
We can find it in the same way like cash is permissionless, right?
Again, the wallet analogy is useful because if you lose your wallet, chances are you lose your
cash and it's gone.
And similarly, in the cash economy, you can buy all kinds of goods.
They can be illegal goods or they can be perfectly normal goods.
And cash is used for both things.
And so the same is true of cryptocurrencies.
And I think the same is true of NFTs.
There's going to be bad actors, right?
There's going to be people infringing on other people's IP.
And, you know, the legal system is going to have to step in and address those issues.
However, the benefits, I think, far outweigh any sort of negative or nefarious uses of the technology
in that any developer can build new experiences around the way we consume media.
Again, when you contrasts today where only the developers who work at Facebook or only the developers who work at Twitter can experiment and innovate on
the information that we see on those platforms, I think we're in a much healthier state if
every developer in the world is free to innovate in an open way without having to ask permission
of these big platforms. Right. That's what you mean by permissionless. And by the way,
it's worth noting all those examples you cited, copyright infringement, IP, etc. That's pretty
prevalent in the physical world. And you don't often always have recourse unless you're
getting this ridiculous royalty and provenance tracking. And we're talking about you actually
have the solution baked into the very problem in the system here.
Yeah, in one sense, you could argue that blockchains actually make the job of forensics a lot
easier because all the information is publicly accessible and available to anyone.
Our partner, Katie Hahn, would obviously argue for that argument.
I mean, at the DOJ, that's literally what she did.
Right. It's all about founding the right balance where the bad actors can be addressed.
And meanwhile, the good actors are free to innovate.
Okay. So last thing, can you guys get some just super quick practical considerations for
startups or industry. I'd love to particularly hit mindsets. It doesn't have to even be advice
for people who are consumers, people who are creators, and even institutional players.
I find that just having conversations and kind of plugging yourself into communities and
building in public is always really great to do in the crypto space. Space is still really
early on and people are all trying to figure everything out. So no one is a complete expert
on what's happening in NFTs. Everyone's very open to talking, collaborating.
So never be afraid of asking questions, joining different communities on Discord or Twitter or wherever they're chatting.
Big corporates and the big institutional banks and big defy players like banking and traditional players.
They're not the types that go into a Discord and try things out or have the mindset you outlined.
Any thoughts there for that group?
Traditional institutions can consider how NFTs can make things more efficient for themselves.
So having these financial assets that everyone has to keep track of,
might be really inefficient or costly, NFTs will enable this to just be a lot of a process
for them. So maybe worth looking into research. It doesn't have to be digital art that they're
turning into NFTs. It could also just be unique financial assets that they have to manage
themselves. Yeah, big corporates and others participate in the markets for creative work through
various channels. A lot of companies work with creators and influencers on marketing and distribution.
And NFTs offer a new channel for both of those things, right? I also think that,
coming to be an owner of a creator, influencer's work will be another way to sort of gain their
attention and potentially gain distribution through the lens of marketing. And that's kind of an
interesting idea. One of the ones that I find very compelling is a new definition of employees
in a modern era where employees can be creators while working for a company and kind of get more
ownership of their ideas. Because traditionally, it's like very binary model. There's not like a middle
ground. And I wonder if that's going to evolve through NFTs within companies and even extending
outside the borders of companies, like in the classic open innovation model.
So I think you're touching on a really big idea.
I would describe that as the ownership economy, where in Silicon Valley, employees at
startups get equity in the startup to line their incentives with the success of the company.
And that model has worked really well for attracting the best talent to come and work at
startups.
But it's not been accessible to everyone, right?
And as a result, the talent pool is not as big as it could be.
And crypto kind of changes the game in that now it's possible to send ownership
value, whether an NFT or ownership of the Bitcoin network, which you can now send that
anywhere in the world instantly. And as a result, you can make anyone an owner on the internet.
And so I think this is a really profound idea where it's going to change the way that people
come to work and that they won't have to go and become a full-time employee to earn some
ownership value for the value that they contribute to the platform or service that they're
building or consuming. Which reminds me, of course, of that famous Bill Joy quote that we all
which is that the smartest people in the world won't ever all work for you. So if you're going to
embrace open innovation, open source, or extend your talent pool, that is a great way to give those
employees, quote, ownership, even if it's fractional ownership, which is great. Yeah. And NFTs make it
accessible to everyone, not just technologists, but consumers and creators as well. Awesome,
you guys. So on this show, even though this is a 3X Explaner episode, I ask people to kind of give me
a quick, short, you know, what's your bottom line on this whole theme? Give it to me.
I have a media background, so I love to fixate on the future where literally every piece of media is accepted as an NFT.
I've used this term a few times in the discussion, but I think what we're building here is this universal library of media that's programmable and where value flow is baked into the technology itself.
And that's just going to lead to a renaissance in online creativity, where the creators of the work are remunerated more fairly than they have been in the,
sort of Web 2 era. Yeah. There's a lot of really exciting stuff happening in the NFT art space and we
have so many creative people coming in and it's going to make crypto overall much better. But
NFTs are also applicable to many industries where you track ownership and currently have a
middleman taking fees for that service. So I expect there to be NFTs in all kinds of different
industries like gaming and finance and healthcare and all kinds of other areas. It's an inevitable
story of technology that you give people tools and things will happen. So it'll be interesting to
see what happens when we unlock that human ingenuity. You guys, thank you so much for joining
this week's episode, this 3X Explaner episode of 16 minutes. Thank you so much, Linda and Jesse.
Thanks for having us. Thank you.