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According to the Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) website, the NFT collection was created by four friends who "set out to make some dope apes, test [their] skills, and try to build something (ridiculous)." [10] Bored Ape NFTs, like other NFTs created and used for digital art purposes aim to provide its owners the "original" artwork.
An NFT is a data file, stored on a type of digital ledger called a blockchain, which can be sold and traded. [9] The NFT can be associated with a particular asset – digital or physical – such as an image, art, music, or recording of a sports event. [10] It may confer licensing rights to use the asset for a specified purpose. [11]
2nd highest sale of generative art at the time. Work is nicknamed "The Goose" due to its emergent design resembling the animal. [18] $6.4 $5.40 Stay Free: 2021 April 16, 2021: Edward Snowden "PleasrDAO" Ethereum First NFT by Snowden on behalf of the Freedom of Press Foundation. [19] $6.2 $5.23 Save Thousands of Lives: 2021 May 8, 2021: Noora ...
Here is a look at some of the most expensive NFT art pieces: Beeple’s Everydays: The First 5,000 Days — $69.3 million Julian Assange and Pak’s Censored — $55 million
FEWOCiOUS was one of the artists that collaborated with the David Bowie Estate on the multiple artist NFT collection Bowie on the Blockchain, which was released in September 2022. [ 20 ] [ 21 ] FEWOCiOUS sold the NFT piece Nice to meet you, I'm Mr. MiSUNDERSTOOD through the auction house Sothesby's for $2.8 million in October 2022.
The concept of non-fungible digital assets that could be owned on a blockchain predated ERC-721, with projects like Colored Coins on Bitcoin in 2012. [7] In 2017, just prior to ERC-721’s publication, Larva Labs launched the CryptoPunks NFT project on Ethereum using ERC-20 (a fungible token standard).
A food safety expert weighs in on flour bugs, also known as weevils, that can infest your pantry after one TikToker found her flour infested with the crawlers.
Fox News host Laura Ingraham says a "real president answers questions" as she reflects on President-elect Donald Trump's openness with the media on "The Ingraham Angle."