After Bitcoin, NFTs promised to be the next digital goldmine and suddenly people were paying stupid amounts of money for digital images of a monkey.
MrBeast builds 100 wells in Africa, Israel’s President Isaac Herzog hits back at Angelina Jolie, Springboks have a new head coach, Human skull found in Florida charity shop, and NFT owners partying at ‘ApeFest’ report vision injuries.
Zuma’s daughter in Russian Twitter propaganda drive, Divorce Act being challenged, 11-Year-old girl beats IQ scores of Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking, and Nelson Mandela gets an NFT.
This week, Damien Hirst began burning hundreds of his own artworks after selling a series of non-fungible tokens (NFTs).
The obscure 3D graphic of a half-naked baby dancing on a loop began its viral journey through email exchanges and soon became one of the most popular internet phenomenons of its time.
Auctioneers Bonhams, in partnership with Nelson Mandela’s eldest daughter, is offering a series of Nelson Mandela’s colourful Robben Island sketches as NFTs.
NFT scammers and digital thieves have arrived and they are taking advantage of the many loopholes that are presenting themselves.
Since the first NFT was created back in 2014, the trend has made a lot of artists on the internet really, really rich.
Quentin Tarantino is planning on selling non-fungible tokens (NFTs) based on the screenplay for his 1994 movie ‘Pulp Fiction’, but Miramax is having none of it.
In March, a digital artist known as Beeple sold a digital collage for around R1 billion. That seems like a long time ago now.
The original “Charlie bit my finger!” viral video will soon be removed from YouTube, after the family involved sold it as an NFT for a very tidy sum of money.
Non-fungible tokens are proving to be popular, and expensive, pieces of digital art. This ‘virtual hoodie’ feels like a bit of a stretch, though.
NFTs are all the rage at the moment, and if you’re struggling to understand the fuss, Eminem is here to help.
This whole NFT business is getting out of hand, and we have proof thanks to New York Times journalist Kevin Roose.
If you’re keen to try your hand at creating and selling your very own NFT, it can be done in a few relatively simple steps.