ARTICLE
15 November 2022

NFT World Cup Initiative Launched, Market Actors Launch NFT Royalty Solutions

B
BakerHostetler

Contributor

BakerHostetler logo
Recognized as one of the top firms for client service, BakerHostetler is a leading national law firm that helps clients around the world address their most complex and critical business and regulatory issues. With five core national practice groups — Business, Labor and Employment, Intellectual Property, Litigation, and Tax — the firm has more than 970 lawyers located in 14 offices coast to coast. BakerHostetler is widely regarded as having one of the country’s top 10 tax practices, a nationally recognized litigation practice, an award-winning data privacy practice and an industry-leading business practice. The firm is also recognized internationally for its groundbreaking work recovering more than $13 billion in the Madoff Recovery Initiative, representing the SIPA Trustee for the liquidation of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC. Visit bakerlaw.com
According to a recent press release, a major U.S. financial services firm has partnered with a major cryptocurrency exchange to launch an NFT auction for fans of the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022.
United States Technology
To print this article, all you need is to be registered or login on Mondaq.com.

According to a recent press release, a major U.S. financial services firm has partnered with a major cryptocurrency exchange to launch an NFT auction for fans of the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022. The initiative will reportedly feature digital art designed using an algorithm and “inspired by iconic goals from five legendary footballers.” The experience will become immersive later this month, when fans will be able to create their own “digital art inspired by their own signature movements” and mint the art onto their own NFT.

This week, NFT marketplace OpenSea reportedly unveiled a new onchain tool that will facilitate enforcement of royalties. The tool, described in an OpenSea blog post as a “simple code snippet,” is intended to allow NFT creators to enforce fees onchain on an opt-in basis and block their NFTs from being listed on marketplaces that do not support creator fees. The tool is available only for new, not-yet-existing NFT collections, a decision that reportedly left some users feeling like there is “no plan and [there are] no clear answers [regarding] existing collection and artist's royalties.”

Last week, Solana-based NFT marketplace Exchange.Art announced a “Royalties Protection Standard” that reportedly “will enforce creator royalties on secondary sales of NFTs that originally mint on its platform.” According to reports, the new standard is an opt-in program that the marketplace designed to allow NFT creators to choose which secondary NFT platforms may feature their NFTs and to prevent “creators' work from being ‘force-listed'” on marketplaces that don't enforce NFT royalties.

In a related development, an Ethereum layer 2 NFT platform recently announced the release of its “community-governed whitelist and blacklist for smart contracts that honor royalty fees.” The feature reportedly allows NFT creators to use the lists to control smart contracts that deploy their NFTs without the help of a third-party exchange, and may be used to limit the transferability of NFTs through the tool's royalty-respecting smart contracts.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

We operate a free-to-view policy, asking only that you register in order to read all of our content. Please login or register to view the rest of this article.

See More Popular Content From

Mondaq uses cookies on this website. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies as set out in our Privacy Policy.

Learn More