Attention: Please take a moment to consider our terms and conditions before posting.

NFT sponsorship

1121315171825

Comments

  • There can be plenty of ways that ticketing ownership via NFT can be enhanced. As an example for football, clubs could choose to add video clips real time of pre/post match interviews with manager/players etc team talks, match highlights, that can all be accessed via the NFT from your mobile wallet...... all sorts of things that can enhance the match experience....... it might be anything in fact that markets the club and or appeals to the customer...... way beyond my imagination...... but a technology nonetheless that should not be written off before it has really taken off.
    But couldn't those add-ons be added to conventional digital tickets? Not being on the blockchain doesn't preclude you from providing ticket holders with digital benefits, surely?

    I think this is why I empathise with people that see current use of NFTs as a solution looking for a problem. Digital tickets, media content can all be provided off blockchain. And for most customers, getting yourself a presence on the blockchain is a massive ballache. I can see why clubs are buying into doing things with crypto etc, because it opens up a quite dedicated customer base, but I can't see why anyone would look to make this the main way of operating at least for the forseeable future?
  • Your web3 wallet (in which the nft would be in) is far more secure than an email address or a login with email would ever be. Whoever is hosting the event would be able to connect to your wallet (say on your phone) to check that you own the nft ticket and you are whitelisted in their systems to enter. The blockchain is verifiable from anyone, anywhere with an internet connection. It's literally a decentralised database. 

    It would also allow you to do things like, loan your ticket to someone (if its something like a season ticket) for money and definitely have it come back to you. You could also sell your ticket on to the open market, the club or artist that the ticket is for, would get a cut from this - it would be another revenue stream for football clubs or artists. Those who wanted to use the ticket would probably have to KYC and whitelist their web3 wallet in order to use it - and to check they aren't malicious. 
    That makes sense. Not sure I agree with clubs getting a cut of, say, a season ticket being sold on. The club sold it at the price it was worth, why should they get any more from it?
  • - a core tenant of crypto is being your own bank, this is like stuffing cash into a mattress, if you were a malicious individual and you knew jeff bezos had a mattress full of his billions, you'd probably target him and get his mattress of unmarked cash.

    - another core tenant is banking the unbanked, some people live in totalitarian regimes where wealth would otherwise be conviscated.

    - until you KYC your crypto wallet is anonymous. 

    - people like privacy.

    Understood, but if someone is saying “Come and buy my nice piece of schmutter”, I want to know who I’m buying from. 
  • - a core tenant of crypto is being your own bank, this is like stuffing cash into a mattress, if you were a malicious individual and you knew jeff bezos had a mattress full of his billions, you'd probably target him and get his mattress of unmarked cash.

    - another core tenant is banking the unbanked, some people live in totalitarian regimes where wealth would otherwise be conviscated.

    - until you KYC your crypto wallet is anonymous. 

    - people like privacy.

    This is the big thing I still can’t get my head around and I am conscious I have queried before. 

    The digital wallets get lost or stolen so I don’t see how it offers more or better security than existing banks etc. 

    Privacy in this context implies some level of wrong doing of desire to hide assets.  It is associated with money laundering. Why is that?


  • Jac_52 said:
    The latter is still an utterly pointless utilisation of NFT technology and I'm not sure the former is worthwhile either personsally. They're currently nothing more than a solution without a problem.
    Seems like I can't help myself.

    Why the now obsession with NFTs solving problems (not necessarily directed at you but easiest post to quote). How much technology solves problems these days?

    Did the latest iPhone solve any problems over one from 5 years ago?

    Did the PS5 solve any problems over the PS3?

    Did moving sat navs from TomToms to infotainment system solve a problem?

    Did Windows 11 solve a problem Windows 10 had?

    I could go on...

    Technology and software these days are more evolutionary than anything. They enhance, speed up, make things more convenient, etc etc. NFTs will drive this in places.

    Creating accounts to do certain things may be a ball ache to some now but it's naive to think it'll always be that way. 
  • I wonder when bank notes came in, the Charlton life equivalent back then we’re saying “it’s just a bit of paper, it’s worthless. It’s just another scam”.
  • I wonder when bank notes came in, the Charlton life equivalent back then we’re saying “it’s just a bit of paper, it’s worthless. It’s just another scam”.
    Probably not as banknotes we’re issued by a bank rather than clicking a few buttons and keeping your fingers crossed 
  • Poor sod. Imagine being that talented and imaginative and living in Bexleyheath. 
    He died before it became suburbs.

    And his house, which is still there, is beautiful.
  • Sponsored links:


  • I agree.

    It's  new technology and there appear to be a lot of POTENTIAL positive uses.

    But most of the positives are POSSIBLE uses  that MAY come about BUT HAVEN'T YET.

    but the sponsor we have is offering none of this to the club or we fans.

    There are no options to buy season tickets as NFTs via generous robots

    They are as dodgy as f*** in every way as is the investment model they use. 
    Yes I know that.

  • Cafc43v3r said:
    TLDR: 

    Generous Robots 🤖 is a ponzi scheme.

    NFTs aren't, as a thing, bad.  
    Hot Dog We Have A Weiner GIF - Hot Dog We Have A Weiner - Discover  Share  GIFs
  • Nobbled by Nobby Solana 
  • Oxford City football club to accept Bitcoin payments

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-oxfordshire-62399371
  • I wonder when bank notes came in, the Charlton life equivalent back then we’re saying “it’s just a bit of paper, it’s worthless. It’s just another scam”.
    Well, to an extent, they’d have been right. Bank notes only have a value if enough people believe they do. That bit where the governor of the Bank of England promises to pay you the value of the note? If you take one in to the Bank of England and ask for your £5 in exchange for your £5 note, all you’ll get will be another £5 note in exchange.
  • Sponsored links:


  • Well, to an extent, they’d have been right. Bank notes only have a value if enough people believe they do. That bit where the governor of the Bank of England promises to pay you the value of the note? If you take one in to the Bank of England and ask for your £5 in exchange for your £5 note, all you’ll get will be another £5 note in exchange.

    When I did that I got three £1 coins and four 50ps (they'd run out of pound coins)
  • I like this discussion, as it’s about the potential uses of NFTs , rather than how the term seems to be used everywhere as a conflation of the digit art market.

    I’m neither pro and anti NFT. I worked in the financial industry before I retired, and these things were often discussed. Although potential uses were seen, they didn’t offer an obvious improvement on what was there today, although that was because it was a highly regulated environment. Going to a decentralized model created challenges which ultimately made most decide any benefit was insignificant compared to the potential costs and risks. 

    So, back to season tickets - my Boston Bruins ST is all electronic. They don’t issue paper tickets at all. It’s managed through Ticketmaster. I have the option to -
     - display a game ticket in Bruins app
     - pull the ticket into my phones wallet and display from there
     - assign the ticket to anyone via Ticketmaster - no fees involved
     - sell the ticket via Ticketmaster. I get the price I ask for, TM adds their fees and charges the buyer. 

    As an end user, I don’t see that an NFT approach adds much. Sure I can take TM out of the loop, but nothing the do directly impacts me. Maybe I could sell for more on the market, by bumping up the price to incorporate what they end up charging the buyer, but that about it. 

    The Bruins could make money, by demanding a share of any resale over the purchase price, or even restricting my ability to sell below their ticket office price as ST prices are significantly discounted. But that is a benefit to them, not me. 

    Neither benefits are really significant. And that to me is the real issue. There’s no single convincing argument to do any of this. There may be some benefits, there may be some downsides/risks. Most uses appear to be trying to reengineer some that that already works to do the same thing using different technologies. 

    New entrants into various markets may try this, which is why we see digital art so often, but established players will need to see a real return for their investment, and regulators will want to see control. Those are going to be big issues hindering adoption. 
    an intelligent, balanced post. Quick, admins, do something! 
  • Everton and Fancurve offer digital shirt NFTs to wear in the metaverse

  • An interesting discussion has gone full weird
  • Just another day on Charlton Life where totally normal people have totally normal conversations....


  • The Robots DAO thing apparently gets a mention in today's Price of Football podcast:

  • Reports that Inter Milan's crypto shirt sponsor Digitalbits have failed to pay their first instalment to the club 

    Gazzetta Italia reporting that the sponsor has already been removed from the Women's and Youth teams while the away shirt release has been postponed
Sign In or Register to comment.

Roland Out Forever!