Forums › Forums › Crypto & NFT Forums › NFT & Crypto Class – Students Only › Perspective – Comicbooks as NFTs (without the need for an e-reader)
-
Perspective – Comicbooks as NFTs (without the need for an e-reader)
Posted by mikedoestheart on April 14, 2022 at 1:36 amhttps://pool.pm/19830ca654a584b1bf1ed1c023fe3a5f1d19dfdd407d51f5766ceba3.BACTokComChocolateWars1T173
Hopefully the link above works — this is precisely the execution of NFTs for comic creators that I am watching avidly myself. Hopefully we can discuss next mtg!
mikedoestheart replied 3 months, 3 weeks ago 4 Members · 6 Replies -
6 Replies
-
“WWWhoaaahh dude!” – *best Keanu *
-
even more important to note — their NFTs come with a limited license agreement — this is something I’ve been considering doing with my NFT comic drop, so i’m glad to have a tangible example to analyze @buddyscalera @vince
-
Now that I am reading the licensing agreement, it makes me wonder if this will be standard and customary in NFTs. It’s super clear what they are allowing the purchaser to buy.
If there are contracts, you have to wonder if they will also need to be minted on the blockchain as well. I would assume you would mint the contract, so nobody can change the terms later.
-
ive always thought this was how smart contracts were meant to be deployed, and always wanted this deployed in the code. i have tutorials on how to embed this into the contract that i can share. now the trick is looking into which platforms allow you to do this already (foundation, rarible, etc.) – if you’re minting them manually you can just include this. i’ll make another thread with my posting into how to do this manually in a bit
-
it makes sense to me to include a licensing agreement with an NFT sale. it gives parameters to what someone is actually buying.
-
1,000% percent. right now we’re just in the in-between space where you either decide to code it yourself or wait for a provider to include that granularity in their platform. choices, choices….!
-
-
-