does anybody still remember NFTs?
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@elilla @mynameistillian 100%. part of why NFT bros got so culty is that once they bought in thier investment became entirely dependant on the price of the asset going up, which could only happen if more people kept buying in. to profit off your asset you had to sell it to someone for more than you paid for it, so you need to convince everyone else that it's super worth it. it has to be the future. you want in too, right?
@elilla @mynameistillian we can divide NFT bros into 3 types: the grifters, the wannabes and the true believers
the grifters have the money and connections to market their NFT crap and make it look like the next big thing. these types have people like mr beast endorse it or they make deals with famous artists or whatever. they have the money to do wash trading: buying their own asset from the themselves for a huge sum to fake interest in the market
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@elilla @mynameistillian we can divide NFT bros into 3 types: the grifters, the wannabes and the true believers
the grifters have the money and connections to market their NFT crap and make it look like the next big thing. these types have people like mr beast endorse it or they make deals with famous artists or whatever. they have the money to do wash trading: buying their own asset from the themselves for a huge sum to fake interest in the market
@elilla @mynameistillian "i bought this NFT for $200 and then sold it 2 weeks later for $2000! imagine how much it will be worth in a year! buy now while you still can and you can get rich with me! please don't consider that i just sold it to myself and that nobody would actually buy this shit for that amount for real. just give me $500 for this other NFT - that's a bargain when the are selling for as much as 2k. you can't afford to miss this chance!"
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@elilla @mynameistillian "i bought this NFT for $200 and then sold it 2 weeks later for $2000! imagine how much it will be worth in a year! buy now while you still can and you can get rich with me! please don't consider that i just sold it to myself and that nobody would actually buy this shit for that amount for real. just give me $500 for this other NFT - that's a bargain when the are selling for as much as 2k. you can't afford to miss this chance!"
@elilla @mynameistillian the wannabes are the dumbasses who see the grifters geting rich and want in. they don't have the resources to make a scheme popular, so they are dependant on catching an NFT project mid boom and then sell before it crashes. they like to think themselves smart investors, which makes them easy marks. unlike the grifters they don't have the connections to know when the people running a particualr grift are going to cash out, taking all the money with them
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does anybody still remember NFTs? man that stuff was so bizarre. i don't even know why there were people who bought into the hype. i remember all kinds of celebrities having them as their pfps. do they all just jump on the latest trendy bandwagon?
@mynameistillian this is the best reminder we have on the Spanish speaking Internet, we never let him forget about this (translation is in the alt text)

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@mynameistillian should have tried buying JPEGs from furry artists, those are much more permanent & a better use of money
Unironically though. We already have pictures of goobers you can trade digitally, they're called adoptables and they're infinitely better both in terms of looks and environmental impact
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does anybody still remember NFTs? man that stuff was so bizarre. i don't even know why there were people who bought into the hype. i remember all kinds of celebrities having them as their pfps. do they all just jump on the latest trendy bandwagon?
@mynameistillian yes, they absolutely do. it's all a race to be seen following the most expensive, shitty trend.
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does anybody still remember NFTs? man that stuff was so bizarre. i don't even know why there were people who bought into the hype. i remember all kinds of celebrities having them as their pfps. do they all just jump on the latest trendy bandwagon?
I do but only because of dan olson's incredible video essay tearing them apart
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@elilla @mynameistillian the wannabes are the dumbasses who see the grifters geting rich and want in. they don't have the resources to make a scheme popular, so they are dependant on catching an NFT project mid boom and then sell before it crashes. they like to think themselves smart investors, which makes them easy marks. unlike the grifters they don't have the connections to know when the people running a particualr grift are going to cash out, taking all the money with them
@elilla @mynameistillian the true believers are the biggest marks of all who believe in NFTs as a lifestyle and technology. generally they're indoctrinated into the cult and become beholden to its ideology
NFT bro culture has extreme toxic positivity problems, because for a project to succeed, for the asset to go up in value, people have to be excited for it. if you've bouth it you need other people to be hyped for it, so any negativity or reasoned analysis is taboo. everyone has to shill 24/7
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Unironically though. We already have pictures of goobers you can trade digitally, they're called adoptables and they're infinitely better both in terms of looks and environmental impact
To steal a joke from bluesky: perhaps the same can be said of all big tech fads recently. We already have the metaverse, it's called vrchat. We already have the ability to put words into a box and get art out, it's called a commission. Anything silicon valley dorks can do furries can do better
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@elilla @mynameistillian the true believers are the biggest marks of all who believe in NFTs as a lifestyle and technology. generally they're indoctrinated into the cult and become beholden to its ideology
NFT bro culture has extreme toxic positivity problems, because for a project to succeed, for the asset to go up in value, people have to be excited for it. if you've bouth it you need other people to be hyped for it, so any negativity or reasoned analysis is taboo. everyone has to shill 24/7
@elilla @mynameistillian all in all it was a hyper-capitalist, hyper-individualist scam that used cult tactics to extract as much money as possible from the poor fools who bought into it. said fools were ofter motivated by the crushing economic pressure we're all struggling with, but they were also people who ultimately were comfortable getting their money by selling to a bigger fool. in essence, most NFT bros were both victim and victimizer. it's the purest distilization of capitalist dynamics
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@elilla @mynameistillian all in all it was a hyper-capitalist, hyper-individualist scam that used cult tactics to extract as much money as possible from the poor fools who bought into it. said fools were ofter motivated by the crushing economic pressure we're all struggling with, but they were also people who ultimately were comfortable getting their money by selling to a bigger fool. in essence, most NFT bros were both victim and victimizer. it's the purest distilization of capitalist dynamics
@elilla @mynameistillian for further information check out Dan Olsen's work. these are fantastic explainers, so much so that i joke that he's the one who burst the NFT bubble
NFTs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQ_xWvX1n9gThe Metaverse
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EiZhdpLXZ8QFinance bros on the stock market
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5pYeoZaoWrA&t=5272sthe first is the most relevant, but the other two delve into the same sorts of guys doing the same sorts of tech bro finance shit
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does anybody still remember NFTs? man that stuff was so bizarre. i don't even know why there were people who bought into the hype. i remember all kinds of celebrities having them as their pfps. do they all just jump on the latest trendy bandwagon?
@mynameistillian scammy celebs are doing crypto now
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