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First iTerm2 Commit for Sale as NFT

opensea.io

15 points by gnachman 5 years ago · 11 comments

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capableweb 5 years ago

(I'm neither for or against NFTs, interesting concept around ownership but way over-hyped currently)

Someone on HN might ask: "Uuh, but how do we know that this is really \"The first iTerm2 Commit\"?"

The steps to verify would be like this:

- Open the page with the NFT, see the author name/address

- In this case "GeorgeNachman" so we search for that on Google

- Now two main results from two different sides show up, Twitter and GitHub

- Visiting the GitHub user we can verify that it actually is the iTerm2 author

- Visiting the Twitter timeline we can confirm the same username has published a tweet about the NFT itself (https://twitter.com/gnachman/status/1376267539894870020)

Now, why is this the interesting? Not sure. I find it weird that it's just a screenshot of git output, instead of the actual git data structure, would have been more interesting. But still, would I ever buy it? No, and not sure who the target audience is either.

Edit: Right, or you could just look at the HN submitter which also seems to be the author. Verify the other profiles via keybase which is linked. Hi!

  • brundolf 5 years ago

    The best explanation I've heard described NFTs as "baseball cards about things other than baseball players". Of course, baseball cards are valuable because of the centralized authority which limits the supply and designates certain ones as "authentic". Anybody can go print a picture of a baseball card; what's valuable is the official Topps one.

    Whereas NFTs kind of give individuals the ability to "print their own baseball cards". What this means is that an NFT's identity isn't really just the item itself, it's the item + the person/entity that "minted" it. Anybody can go create an NFT for your piece of art, but arguably only the "official" ones from you are (should be?) valuable.

    WRT NFTs as a whole: as with nearly everything else on the blockchain, I think it would be better as a centralized service that "minted" these "cards" and skipped the crypto stuff entirely. In addition to getting rid of the environmental concerns, this central authority could vet each "verified artist/creator", making sure that each NFT actually does come from the right party and isn't being fabricated by someone else (this is a real problem right now; I follow Twitter artists who deleted all of their art posts for fear of someone turning them into NFTs without their consent). If security is a concern for such high-priced transactions, just... use really long passwords/keys to secure people's accounts/items. Maybe upon purchase you get a custom YubiKey that has a picture of the item, or something.

    ...of course, then you wouldn't have all the crypto-fanatics hyping it up and boosting prices to get the whole thing off the ground :P

  • powerapple 5 years ago

    Many NFT would rely on urls, assuming urls would be online for ever and assuming the content they are pointing to will not change. This seems to be flawed don't you think?

    About NFT itself, I use T shirt analogy to convince my self: you pay quite a bit for a logo on a T shirt, with NFT you are buying the signature the logo, so if we are already doing this in real life, we probably would do it in the future.

    • capableweb 5 years ago

      Yes, NFTs relying on (centralized) URL is obviously bad and doesn't fit well with cryptocurrencies in the first place, as the entire point is to build a decentralized financial system.

      NFTs relying on content-addressing are all fine though (like IPFS) and most of the NFTs I've seen are using IPFS, although some of them screw up the linking and add a link to a IPFS gateway instead of just the hash.

  • shusson 5 years ago

    > "how do we know that this is really \"The first iTerm2 Commit\"?"

    You can easily check the commit here: https://github.com/gnachman/iTerm2/commit/eb4c3c33506b604e35....

    I think you mean to ask "how can we verify the author?".

  • boublepop 5 years ago

    Target audience are people who have a bit of money but not much, who know a bit about crypto but not much, who believe that they can buy it now and sell it later at an extremely inflated price. And there’s a never ending line of potential buyers because the media is in overdrive feeding the FOMO after the fake sale of the 69mil NFT.

shusson 5 years ago

I get the human nature part of wanting to collect rare items. But normally humans show off their collection somewhere. Where are people showing off their NFT tokens?

  • SilverRed 5 years ago

    There is nothing special you aren't understanding. NFTs are simply a scam. The Beeple sale was "purchased" by a business partner so the both of them could hype NFTs and profit on selling them.

  • Maven911 5 years ago

    Marketplaces have a show off your collection pages and share to social media

    • shusson 5 years ago

      yeah but that seems pretty lame. Since basically anyone can copy the digital asset and link it on social media. What would be nicer is if applications like github adhered to the NFT in someway, like showing a badge for the NFT.

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