69 million reasons why you should care about NFTs

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Turns out Warren Buffett is just a few degrees of separation away from that crazy $69.3 million Christie’s auction of the artist Beeple’s NFT work “Everydays: The First 5000 Days,”—making it the third most most-expensive piece of art sold by a living artist after Jeff Koons and David Hockney.

That’s because the runner-up bidder—who lost in the final minute with a bid $250,000 less (much drama there)—was controversial crypto entrepreneur, Tron founder and BitTorrent CEO, Justin Sun. The same Justin Sun you may remember who paid $4.57 million to have lunch with Buffett early last year—much drama there too. (Remember Justin Sun, we will come back to him.)

A man looks at digital paintings by US artist Beeple at a crypto art exhibition entitled Virtual Niche: Have You Ever Seen Memes in the Mirror?, one of the world's first physical museum shows of blockchain art, ahead of its opening in Beijing on March 26, 2021. - RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY MENTION OF THE ARTIST UPON PUBLICATION - TO ILLUSTRATE THE EVENT AS SPECIFIED IN THE CAPTION (Photo by NICOLAS ASFOURI / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY MENTION OF THE ARTIST UPON PUBLICATION - TO ILLUSTRATE THE EVENT AS SPECIFIED IN THE CAPTION / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY MENTION OF THE ARTIST UPON PUBLICATION - TO ILLUSTRATE THE EVENT AS SPECIFIED IN THE CAPTION (Photo by NICOLAS ASFOURI/AFP via Getty Images)
A man looks at digital paintings by US artist Beeple at a crypto art exhibition entitled Virtual Niche: Have You Ever Seen Memes in the Mirror?, one of the world's first physical museum shows of blockchain art, ahead of its opening in Beijing on March 26, 2021. (Photo by NICOLAS ASFOURI/AFP via Getty Images) · NICOLAS ASFOURI via Getty Images

I’m making this point about Buffett not to suggest for a moment that he’s plunged into the burgeoning netherworld of NFTs, or non fungible tokens, (explainer in next paragraph), but to demonstrate that NFTs are getting closer to Buffett and to all of us. The ripples of this NFT revolution—and after digging into it this week, I can tell you it is a revolution—may not be felt immediately but they will be soon.

Before we get into that though, let’s back up and answer the question many of you have: What the heck is an NFT anyway?

Simply put, a non fungible token is anything in a digital form; say an image, a video or a song, with a unique signature that is accounted for by Blockchain technology usually by the cryptocurrency Ethereum. That means a digital picture of a cat or a rat or a hat can be bought or sold with completely verifiable ownership through computer code. Of course there can be copies of this NFT, just like there are copies of a painting, but there is only one original and the NFT, the token, is its statement of authenticity or provenance. The "non fungible" part refers to the item being singular, as opposed to currency, where say one bitcoin or a $100 bill is the same as any other.

So yes, anything digital can be turned, "bing bong," as Beeple said to me, (see more from him below), into an NFT.

I agree with my old school mate, Kara Swisher, who wrote last week in the New York Times that NFTs were really a matter of: “Everything that can be digitized will be digitized.” The question after that though is, what should be digitized? Meaning what things when digitized, create value, in the broadest sense?

That’s what we’re in the process of finding out.

That makes this a bit of a moment for NFTs and more importantly for crypto. Heaven knows we are only in the very beginning of an explosion of experimentation and discovery here. Many of us have been waiting for that time when crypto jumped species from wonk to mainstream, which could be starting now. NFT mania, enabled by the acceptance and commercialization of blockchain and crypto currency, is really just the latest phase of the digital revolution. What’s new now is that this is the first time that many of us see how crypto currency can actually enter and impact our lives.