Poetry Just Became Profitable for the First Time in Human History
TL;DR
Maria Caballero's "Cords" poem was just minted as a Bitcoin NFT (aka Bitcoin Ordinal), then sold by Sotheby’s for a tidy $11,000.
Being able to prove poetry as scarce — and at the same time, turn it into a globally tradable asset? That’s only possible with Web3 technology.
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You know those ‘Oh, yep, we’re here to stay’ feelings that you’ll get every now-and-then in Web3?
(Similar to the ‘we are so back!’ feelings, but more permanent).
Yeah, well - we’re having one of those moments rn.
Maria Caballero's "Cords" poem was just minted as a Bitcoin NFT (aka Bitcoin Ordinal), then sold by Sotheby’s for a tidy $11,000.
But that’s not what’s pushing the ‘oh, yep, we’re here to stay’ sentiment…
And it’s not the fact that Bitcoin Ordinals, which only became a ‘thing’ this time last year, is already being embraced by a centuries-old institution like Sotheby’s…
Instead, it’s that — and this is going to sound like a tongue-in-cheek quip that you’d hear from your stuffy uncle (but it ain’t):
Whoever heard of making money from poetry??
Being able to prove poetry as scarce — and at the same time, turn it into a globally tradable asset? That’s only possible with Web3 technology.
And yeah, we agree:
Wheatus’ 2000 hit ‘Teenage Dirtbag’ was poetry in its purest form, and it sold 5M copies worldwide - so to say ‘poetry hasn’t been profitable in the past’ is a stretch…
But the point we’re trying to make is:
The sale of Maria Caballero's "Cords" poem is a reminder that a whole range of things that rely on scarcity to denote their value can now be digitized and traded (globally) - where they couldn’t be previously.
Which means there’s a whooole bunch of new opportunities waiting to be discovered/proven out in the Web3 space.
(‘Oh, yep, we’re here to stay.’)