Fintech ?? Food - 12 Sep 2021
Hey everyone???, thanks for coming back to Brainfood, where I take the week's biggest events and try to get under the skin of what's happening in Fintech. If you're reading this and haven't signed up, join the 7,773 others by clicking below, and to the regular readers, thank you.???
???Plug:?This weeks’ rant is about NFTs, but if you want more, we had a fantastic conversation on?Blockchain Insider: NFTs explained . Why NFTs are more than JPEGs.
???Plug:?Do you want to work in banking as a service? Are you obsessed with the subject and wanna shape it for others? Hit me up; 11:FS helps banks and non-banks understand an execute in the subject, and we need you :)
???Shout out:?Fintech Devcon happened earlier this week, and I could not have greater FOMO. Several people have told me the developer first content was exceptional, and especially Angela Strange's keynote blew everyone away. Fun fact: Angela's work on creating a banking stack inspired the work that became the Banking as a Service report ??
Weekly Rant ??
Why 8 words are worth nearly $1m
In case you missed it last week, the world of NFTs was set on fire by a seemingly innocent collection of words called "loot." On the 27th of August noted artist, Dom Hof (dhof) announced "Loot for adventurers" with the following tweet:
Loot is essentially just a list of items. It has no artwork, no stats, or even rules about how the items are used. There are 8,000 unique lists of words in the "Loot for adventurers" drop, but that's not the most interesting part.
Immediately thousands of people spent their Crypto to own one of these lists from themselves.?Then, 10s, if not hundreds, of complementary projects appeared to fill in the gaps from Loot.??Everything from teams creating artwork, tools to monitor price changes, and even creating worlds (games) full of adventurers who would use this gear.?
The Loot NFTs are currently trading anywhere between $36,000 and $938,000. At this point, you may be thinking.
What the hell is an NFT?
(Skip this bit if you're familiar with them, but I wanted an excuse to write an explanation that's been rattling around in my head for a few years)
?NFTs (as many of you know) standards for non-fungible token.
I like to work backward in defining NFTs.
So
Token:
Is any object that represents ownership or access. In the physical world, both the key to a house and the deed to the house are tokens. The key represents access to the house, and the deed represents ownership. Neither of those things?is?an actual house. In the world of Crypto, we are talking about cryptographic tokens.
Cryptographic tokens are usually a set of numbers that represent an underlying data set. In the world of credit cards, we see "card tokenization" as a common phrase, where a device (like your mobile phone) can store a token that represents your card number, expiry, and security code without storing the data directly.
The other common non Cryptoasset use of tokens is for access (access tokens) to websites or services. In this case, user credentials are "tokenized" to be passed between an application and an API without revealing the underlying data.?
Cryptographic tokens can represent ownership of something (e.g., your credit card account) or access (to spend using your credit card).
In the world of Cryptoassets, these tokens are managed by wallets and stored on a blockchain. Wallets are software (and sometimes hardware) that help you manage your tokens securely.
The blockchain is a single source of truth for all tokens and which wallet has which token (and an entire history of all token transactions). The wallet is software that allows the user to access the blockchain to send or receive Cryptoassets.
Using a wallet, you can access or own tokens, that are stored (recorded) on a Blockchain.
Fungible:?
A fungible good is replaceable for any other. So $1 is no different from another $1; they have equal value.
Any part of a fungible good is indistinguishable from another (so $0.01 = $0.01); it doesn't matter which one you own.
Dollars are fungible, Bitcoin and Ethereum are fungible, and in fact, most currencies are fungible.
Non Fungible:?
Therefore, any non-fungible good is not replaceable for another. A banana cannot easily be replaced with a toaster. The original Mona Lisa has more value than a replica etc.??
Non-fungible items are proveably unique. They tend to have distinguishing features that make them different from anything else in the same category. Your cat is very different from someone else's cat; for example, even if they look similar, they have different DNA, and you'd be pretty annoyed if someone swapped your pet because "they're the same thing."
In the physical world, most things are non-fungible.??
In the digital world, it was surprisingly challenging to make something genuinely non-fungible and proveably unique. If I sent you a JPEG via email, you don't have the original; you have a perfect digital copy.?
We've seen this play out in the world of digital intellectual property; ever since Napster in the late 90s, the ability to quickly copy music, film, or pictures transformed our relationship with media. Media became cheapened because it is so simple to replicate.
NFTs have features other digital objects don't have.
Each token has a complete record of previous holders/owners.?Because we have a global record of every token, we always know which token belongs to which wallet. This means we can also see which wallets historically owned those tokens.
NFTs create the perfect provenance (history) of a token. So, in the same way, knowing a celebrity used to own a house can increase its value, knowing a star owned a Cryptopunk can increase its worth.
Each token (NFT) is guaranteed to be unique. Each token is assigned a unique identifier (hash), and, no other token can ever use the same identifier on that blockchain.??Each token can also store metadata about itself (e.g. this JPEG is edition 1 of 100). In the same way having a limited edition physical good (e.g. car, or signed album) creates value, we now have this in the digital world.
Someone can copy the artwork, but the only way to own the original is to record the token transfer on the appropriate blockchain.
Each token can grant "ownership."??The only way to have an NFT is to complete a transaction on a blockchain to purchase (or receive) that NFT from the previous owner. (There is some debate about whether owning an NFT means you own underlying legal and intellectual property, but that's a different debate).
NFTs create digital scarcity.??With NFTs, an artist or creator can make 1, 10, 100, or 1000 limited editions and know that there can only ever be that many Crypto wallets that hold the token for that NFT. Many famous NFT projects use this scarcity to create value (e.g., there are only 10,000 "original" Cryptopunks).?
Tokens (and NFTs) can grant access.??Developers can use tokens to access software, experiences, or even more complex functionality like?airdrops .??
For example, the Bored Ape Yacht Club started as a collection of 10,000 unique works of art with collectible characters. Over time, developers have extended their features to airdrop add-on characters (like the Bored Ape kennel club, a matching dog to go with your bored ape).?
Another example is token gated communities. Groups with shared interests (like a video game, culture, or even just Crypto itself) can create a token that grants a series of benefits. Perhaps the clearest example is the "friends with benefits" (FWB) community, which operates as a global society or membership club.
Holders who have more than 75 FWB can access their online chat forum (on Discord). Someone who wants access to the token can buy the token from a marketplace (like Uniswap), join the discord server, and then connect their Crypto wallet to the discord server. The server checks the blockchain (in this case Ethereum) to see if that wallet does indeed hold 75 FWB, and if it does, the owner of that wallet is then granted access to the online forum. From here, the FWB community also has other uses for the token (like voting, tickets to access real-world events, and much more).
NFTs change how IP is distributed.?Back to our Bored Apes. The developers wrote software to issue a new unique digital token to any Crypto wallet that currently holds one of the 10,000 unique Bored Ape tokens.??
To replicate this functionality without NFTs, you'd have to build a centralized server and build your own access management/database of ownership. The Bored Ape Yacht club didn't have to make Crypto wallets or a blockchain; they just created the art for the characters and the software that managed the token minting, and the network takes care of everything else. The "owners" of Bored Apes can use the same software (their wallet) to buy and sell the Bored Apes as they use for any other NFT. In effect, NFTs created a global marketplace for collectors.
NFTs change how IP collects revenue.??Perhaps the most powerful feature of NFTs is that functionality can be baked into the token. The artist can ensure that a % of each transaction to buy the NFT is sent back to the artist. The artist sets this % when they mint (create) the NFT, and this logic is then enforced by the blockchain.
So the only way a Crypto wallet can buy (or receive) the NFT is if the % of that transaction is sent to the wallet of the original artist or creator. In the physical world, if an artist creates an asset and sells it for $10, that is all they ever receive. If an artist creates an NFT and sells it for $10, they receive $10, but when the asset is sold for $1,000 later, the artist gets a % of that future sale (and all future sales).
Digital goods also have zero cost of distribution. If I want to send you a CD or a signed work of art, that costs. If you buy an NFT, as the issuer, I have (in principle) no shipping costs (except for Ethereum gas fees which are currently high but maybe solved in time and alternatives exist). In time it's rational that digital distribution's marginal cost trends towards zero.
Now any artist or creator can create IP and issue it to a global marketplace of buyers without permission.??This means a musician doesn't need a record label; an artist doesn't need a gallery or art dealer. No middleman, more revenue from the secondary market.
领英推荐
(If you want to read more about NFTs as a subject, a16z has a list of "NFT Canon ," including all of the essential reads and explainers).
Why is Loot an interesting NFT?
This tweet nails it - Loot is NFT improv.
While the core use case of NFTs up until this point had been digital collectibles, Loot took this a step further. Rather than the art itself being the NFT, the ways you can use the NFT unleashed a wave of creativity.??
Kyle Russel ?gave an example contrasting the Marvel cinematic universe vs. Loot. Marvel built characters, worlds, costumes and monetized them through countless comics, films, and merchandise.
The Loot approach would be to start by generating hero names and a set of powers. Others could build tools to define which powers are stronger, which others are rarer. Artists are free to imagine heroes, illustrate them, and in time coalesce around a shared of shared traits for characters. Writers can create stories, and the community can begin to drive where the broader narrative is taken and how the IP is monetized.?
Whether this approach takes off, nobody knows. But by not having one issuer of the NFT, the space for creativity increased.
By not having one issuer of the NFT, the space for creativity increases. Digital items become permissionless.
For example, one of the common use cases people give for NFTs is video games. In the "free to play" model, the game itself is free, but items like character skins or weapons cost extra. This model is used by games like Fortnite or Roblox.?
By creating an NFT of a sword or a gun, an artist defines the properties of that item that the game has to use (e.g., the weapon is very powerful). But these items don't transplant from one game to another easily. While a gun may be "fair" inside Halo, it's overpowered when you bring it to Call of Duty.??
With the Loot approach, the developer gets to choose how the item is interpreted by the game. The item can be rare but be made to fit the game's existing rules and parameters.
Loot is a primitive, perhaps the most primitive form of a digital good.
When developers are given primitives, exciting things can happen.
Imagine a scene from Ready Player One. At one point, the game's villain uses an item to create a shield in a battle against our heroes. The?Orb of Osuvox ?is an artifact that makes a sphere indestructible by any other object or weapon in the universe).??
The book imagines this game world (and its items) being created by one person, who hid these items throughout the universe and could be used in any game world.
With the Loot model, the "Orb of Osuvox" token would exist, there would only be one, but every game world is free to interpret its implementation.
As we change ownership and access, we also change finance and the economy. Damn, that's cool.
ST.?
4 Fintech Companies ??
1.?Keebo ?- The credit builder credit card (UK)
Speaking of interesting underwriting
2.?Otto Credit ?- Credit builder credit card secured against your car
3.?Abound ?- Neobank for SMB features as an API
4.?Canopy ?- Practice management for accounting firms
(h/t?Alex Johnson )
Things to know ??
Good Reads ??
Fun fact, a high percentage of 11:FS work right now is developing bank adjacent brands and services. Where Fintech meets non Fintech industries is a fascinating nexus. Perhaps second only to where DeFi meets CeFi.?
Tweets of the week ??
That's all, folks. ??
Remember, if you're enjoying this content, please do tell all your fintech friends to check it out and hit the subscribe button :)
Technical Leader | Team Builder | Problem Solver | Strategic Thinker
3 年Steve, from some real experts instead of a hobbyist ??
Product Exec | B2B SaaS | FinTech | ex-Shopify (SHOP) | Advisor | Board Member
3 年Great write up Simon as always and we missed you at #fintechdevcon.
Account Executive & Team Lead @ FI Group | Improving your R&D funding process internationally through human connection & technology
3 年Great read and I loved the breakdown on what a NFT is!