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Forwarded from Ola Yakubu
Part 3: The Mona Lisa of the Internet 🖼️

Let's use another analogy.

The Mona Lisa painting exists in the Louvre museum in Paris.

· Millions of people have photos of the Mona Lisa on their phones. They can download it, print it, and put it on their wall.
· But only one person/institution owns the actual painting. The Louvre has the one and only original.

Owning an NFT is like owning the digital version of that original painting.

· You might right-click and save a picture of the NFT art. 📸 Anyone can do that.
· But only your digital wallet (your crypto address) holds the token that says, "I am the official owner of the original file." The blockchain is the public record book that proves it, just like the Louvre's records prove they own the Mona Lisa.

The value isn't always in the image itself, but in the provenance (the history of ownership) and the bragging rights.
Forwarded from Ola Yakubu
Forwarded from Ola Yakubu
Forwarded from Ola Yakubu
Part 4: How do NFTs work? (The Simple Version) ⚙️

1. Creation (Minting): An artist creates a digital file (art, music, a video clip). They then "mint" it as an NFT on a blockchain platform (Ethereum is the most popular). This process creates the unique token attached to the file.
2. Sale: The artist lists this NFT for sale on a marketplace (like OpenSea).
3. Buying: You buy the NFT using cryptocurrency. The transaction is recorded on the blockchain. You now have the token in your digital wallet.
4. Ownership: The blockchain permanently shows that your wallet owns that specific NFT. If you sell it later, the record will show the transfer to the new owner.
Forwarded from Ola Yakubu
Part 5: Why would anyone buy an NFT? 🧐

This is the most common question! Here are the main reasons:

1. To Support Artists: It's a new way for digital creators to sell their work directly to fans and get paid, often including royalties on future sales.
2. Collectibility & Status: Just like collecting stamps, rare sneakers 👟, or baseball cards, people enjoy owning rare digital items. It's a new form of collecting and showing their interests.
3. Community & Access: Many NFT projects act like a membership card. Owning a specific NFT might give you access to a private Discord group, real-world events, or future perks.
4. Investment/Speculation: People buy NFTs hoping their value will go up over time, so they can sell them later for a profit. This is very risky, as prices can also go down to zero.
Forwarded from Ola Yakubu
Part 6: The Elephant in the Room: Criticisms & Risks 🐘⚠️

It's important to be balanced. NFTs have big downsides:

· Environmental Concerns: Some blockchains (like Ethereum used to) require a lot of energy to process transactions, which has environmental impacts. (Many are moving to much greener methods now).
· It's a Bubble/Risky: The NFT market is very new and unstable. It's easy to buy something that becomes worthless. Many people have lost money.
· Scams are Common: There are many fakes, copycats, and "rug pulls" (where creators take the money and run). You have to be very careful.
· "Right-Click Save" Mentality: People joke that you don't truly "own" the image because anyone can save a copy. While true, the value is in the provenance, not the image file itself.
Forwarded from Ola Yakubu
Summary 🎓

· NFT = Non-Fungible Token.
· It's a unique digital certificate of ownership for a digital item, stored on a blockchain.
· Think of it as a digital autograph or the Mona Lisa's deed of ownership.
· It makes digital items scarce and collectible.
· It's a high-risk, new technology with both exciting possibilities and significant dangers.

That's it for the lesson! Thanks for your time🙏🏽
Forwarded from Ola Yakubu
📍NFT Knowledge Check: 10 Questions

Instructions: For each question, choose the best answer(s). Be careful—some questions have more than one right answer!
Question 3
Using the"digital autograph" analogy from the lesson, what does the autograph represent in the world of NFTs?
Anonymous Poll
0%
A) The image file itself
0%
B) The cryptocurrency used to buy it
100%
C) The digital certificate of authenticity
0%
D) The artist's social media handle
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Forwarded from Ola Yakubu
➡️Level 1 (S30) = 20 IGT with a total of 30 positions in 4 rows

▪️First row, there are 2 positions —
Payments go to the upline

▪️Second row, there are 4 positions —
All payments are received by the user, which is 25% X 4 positions = 5 IGT X 4 = 20 IGT

▪️Third row, there are 8 positions —
4 payments are received by the user, which is 25% X 4 positions = 5 IGT X 4 = 20 IGT
The next 4 payments are provided for auto-upgrade, which is 25% X 4 positions = 20 IGT

▪️Fourth row, there are 16 positions —
14 payments are provided for auto-upgrade, which is 50% X 14 positions = 10 IGT X 14 = 140 IGT
The last 2 payments are used for auto-Reinvest, which is 50% X 2 positions = 10 IGT X 2 = 20 IGT

Total = 20 + 20 + 20 + 140 + 20 = 220 IGT

Of this total, it already includes:

➡️Received by the user = 40 IGT
➡️Auto-upgrade = 160 IGT
➡️Auto-Reinvest = 20 IGT

And of course, that's just the first cycle. For the second cycle and beyond, all auto-upgrade fees will be received by the users.
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