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ted (not lasso)
@ted
it is WILD to me that we only have allowlists for minting and NOT for secondary sales. that’s not how the trading of art, luxury goods, family heirlooms, homes, even surfboards works. most secondary marketplaces IRL have a curation layer to filter buyers. this is why NFT marketplaces lose volume to private txns :)
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Simon
@simongoldberg
Pretty sure opensea had this feature a while back where you could set allowlists for secondary. Might be wrong but swore there was something like this. But also I think this gets into a deeper conversation about truly “decentralized” NFTs/assets when/if this becomes a thing.
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ted (not lasso)
@ted
why do NFTs/assets have to be decentralized? current secondary market for NFTs only allows the fastest and richest buyer to win. is that really a net positive? look at human history and the transfer of valuable assets over time. the sellers care who the buyer is. allowlists enable invaluable ongoing curation.
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Joe Petrich 🟪
@jpetrich
An allowlist isn't necessary for a seller to choose a buyer. Offers already accomplish this without the drawback of limiting permanently the pool of who can be sold to.
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amtwo 🎩
@amtwo.eth
Because a permissioned system can just be created on a private SQL database. Doesn’t need a blockchain for it.
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ɃΞrn
@b7
ngmi
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Simon
@simongoldberg
I’m not saying they have to be or don’t have to be. More of a conversation starter. If they aren’t and become too controlled from creator/company then what’s really the difference than owning an in game asset on Roblox or a song on iTunes.
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