Non-Fungible Tokens – Hype, Flaws, and Innovation
A digital certificate for intellectual property is sweeping the music world. Known as a Non-Fungible Token, or an NFT, these cryptographically verified digital collectibles allow artists to store unchangeable versions of their music/art on the blockchain. This article explores the hype, the flaws, and the innovation of this new technology and what it means for you as a producer, artist, or musician.
What is Blockchain technology?
At this point, we have all heard about Bitcoin. But what many don’t know is that it is the technology behind Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies that holds the power and potential to revolutionize all aspects of our digital exchanges.
You can think of Blockchain Technology as the “Web 3.0”. As opposed to our current internet where virality, piracy, and duplicability reign, Blockchain technology is an open-source distributed ledger operated by a global network of decentralized computers, each of which has reached a consensus on mathematical transaction verification. In other words, information and transactions on the blockchain can’t be changed once they are created.
(Taken from the Book “Token Economy” by Shermin Voshmgir.)
These cryptographically secure, decentralized ledgers make it possible for digital assets to take on almost physical qualities, making them incredibly difficult to hack/counterfeit while expanding the advantages of self-executing contracts (Smart Contracts) contained in the code.
So what is a Non-Fungible Token (NFT)?
(CryptoPunks by Larva Labs, considered the first-ever NFT on the Ethereum blockchain)
Enter the world of Fine Art and collectibles, blockchain goes to work to solve the biggest problem in digital art, its inherent fungibility. By creating a digital certificate for intellectual property, Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs) cryptographically verify the artist and origin of a piece of art or music and store a tracking ID on the blockchain. In contrast to cryptocurrencies, each NFT can be separated from the others, meaning that no two tokens are alike.
Where Bitcoin is “digital gold,” NFTs propose to further fill in the gap of wealth-building assets in digital form by creating one-of-a-kind editions directly from creators, mimicking the valuable uniqueness of physical collectibles and fine art.
Despite the hype, questions still linger whether the longevity of these tokens is as secure as they purport to be. At the moment, most NFTs in existence function by storing their metadata on servers off any actual blockchain. This means for the majority of NFT platforms, the art itself is not on the blockchain, but rather an identification number that can then be used to retrieve your metadata from the off-chain network (the most popular being the InterPlanetary File System or IPFS.)
While many consider IPFS as a sort of “permanent internet,” IPFS nodes treat stored data like a cache, meaning there is no guarantee the data will continue to be stored unless the content (retrieved through a Content ID) is pinned to a node. IPFS functions as a sort of distributed BitTorrent, so unless users are downloading your contents across different nodes, your backups might only exist at the source of your node. Companies such as PINATA have filled this need of hosting at a tiered service cost while others choose to pin directly on their own servers. If a node where your data is pinned shuts down or is lost (you forget to pay your monthly Pinata bill) your metadata on the IPFS could also be lost. Collectors can avoid this by hosting data on their own personal node, let’s say a home computer. But likewise, if your private node is damaged or shuts down you will lose access to your IPFS content. The responsibility for the maintenance of off-chain NFT data is yet to be defined and will likely determine the true longevity of most NFTs.
(Source:The broken promises of NFT Art up to date as of November 2020)
A small number of innovators such as LarvaLab’s Autoglyphs have broken this pattern of off-chain metadata storage by making the code of the token itself the art. Other generative visual and audio projects such as Eulerbeats use mathematical algorithms to create music and visuals aimed to create “on-chain” art. Since storing images and audio directly on a blockchain uses a significant amount of energy (the Ethereum blockchain alone has the equivalent energy usage as the country of Ecuador) solutions for this will have to address energy usage for expanding chain content across the board. Until then, time will tell whether NFTs on external storage servers will last.
(Source: The broken promises of NFT Art November 2020)
How could NFTs / Blockchain change your music game?
(‘Death of the Old’ by Grimes x Mac, NFT sold in February for $388k, see the original sale on Nifty Gateway here)
Beyond the flaws of off-chain NFT metadata, the medium still presents quite a few innovations for artists to take advantage of.
1. Registered Digital Ownership, Creating a “Collectible” – In a world where online streams barely cover most artists mastering fees, adding a digitally collectible version of your music or project to your income stream could make a world of difference. Artists such as 3LAU, Deadmau5, and Grimes have succeeded spectacularly at this. Like other collectibles, the value of your NFT version track, stems, demo, album, or other tokenizable merchandise will depend on your own homegrown notoriety. Given the hype of the market (think the Dot.com boom of the early 2000s) and the low cost to create a minted token, it might be a worthwhile investment to help artists recoup some of 2020’s devastating effects on the music industry.
2. Royalty Payments – This has to be the most exciting aspect benefit artists can have from making an NFT’s. Through the use of Smart Contracts, NFTs can be programmed to have built-in royalty payments for every subsequent sale of your NFT, making sure that whenever someone is making money off of your art you are included. This can vary depending on the number of sales your piece has e.g. 10% commission for the first sale, 20% commission for every sale thereon. These contracts are literally written in the code of the token. Beware, not all platforms for NFTs contain these royalties so make sure to do your research when choosing. Additionally, the is currently no universal standard to account for royalties in secondary markets (though the “Ethereum Improvement Proposal” or EIP-2981 is currently in the works to solve that). This means if your NFT is sold outside the marketplace through which you created the smart contract you may not receive the royalties you are entitled to. We will have to wait and see how this universal standard might be implemented to further support artists.
3. Decentralized Independent Distribution and DAO’s – At the moment, NFT’s are taking PROs, publishers, and labels by surprise. According to Billboard, as of March 11, 2021, labels and publishers have little to no rules in place regarding the ownership and distribution of profits from NFTs. Artists can use platforms to distribute and track their NFTs without labels or other middlemen. At the moment, this means profits are going straight to artists. Who knows how long this might last though as labels are sure to be gearing up to take a piece of the action.
(Source: Deadmau5 teams up with Audius October 2020, read full article here.)
Another option on the horizon for the music industry is the creation of DOA streaming platforms for crypto- music (so not necessarily using tradeable NFTs but still utilizing blockchain innovations). DOAs, or Decentralized Autonomous Organizations, are organizations built on the Ethereum blockchain that hold the potential to run autonomously using self-executed code (smart contracts). The framework of each DAOs is different but you can liken them to a sort of digital co-op where rules are voted on by participants and then executed automatically through collectively maintained smart contracts. This would allow the DAO to be cut out middleman expenses, passing benefits directly onto artists. Audio.co is one such platform gaining notoriety with artists such as 3LAU, Deadmaus, Mr.Carmack, and Rezz. While there is potential for new forms of decentralized platforms, DAO’s have not perfected their distribution of power and at the moment are still subject to power grabs and less democratic behavior if the interest of the DAO is voted contrary to the core coding team.
What still needs to be said…
Climate Change is real even in a digital world. Blockchains, of which there are hundreds, use an insane amount of energy to vet their blocks. Bitcoin alone is estimated to use the energy equivalent of the country of Argentina and Ethereum that of Ecuador.
According to Nature, “…Bitcoin usage, should it follow the rate of adoption of other broadly adopted technologies, could alone produce enough CO2 emissions to push warming above 2 °C within less than three decades.”
This is a terrifying prospect. As the popularity of this medium grows, the digital age will need to account for real-world threats created by its adoption.
While NFTs and blockchain could revolutionize current systems, many challenges still lie ahead. From collectibility and longevity to artist royalties and distributed streaming platforms, NFT’s and blockchain will continue to shape the music world and beyond.
Only time will tell whether this technology will live up to its namesake. Will you be making your next single as an NFT? Comment Below.
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