Lawsuit: Sotheby’s $24M sale to FTX gave Bored Ape NFTs “an air of legitimacy.”

  • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    My my, whoever could have seen this coming other than 99.9% of the population.

  • Poggervania@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    It’s hella malicious, but I sincerely hope this lawsuit gets tossed or these people lose if it goes through.

    Those people played the bag holding lottery and lost hard. They were not scammed because they chose to listen to all the shills instead of doing their DD on a financial decision that they knew next to nothing about. If they did, then they would know NFT art and crypto is pretty much all hype with no intrinsic or physical value to actually back those things.

    • Juno@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      Look up the actual history of Selling Bridges in New York and other places. People spent often their life savings on such financial gambles.

  • Sorchist@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    So the idea is that because FTX and Yuga Labs were all mixed up in each other’s business, and because FTX was secretly the buyer of the Bored Apes, then functionally this was a giant wash trade, one step removed. A sham auction whose purpose was to blow up the price of NFTs, and Sotheby is supposed to be culpable because they participated in the sham and lent it legitimacy with their reputation.

    That seems like a pretty legit complaint.

    I mean, I have no sympathy for the people who got fucked buying NFTs but I have even less sympathy for the people who did the fucking, so absolutely let this lawsuit happen and let them burn.

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I think this hinges on whether Sotheby knew FTX was the buyer and intentionally misrepresented that fact, and that sounds likely.

      That said:

      That’s an average [sale] price of over $241,000, but Bored Ape NFTs now sell for a floor price of about $50,000 worth of ether cryptocrurrency

      It peaked at over $420,000 in April 2022 but plummeted to about $90,000 six weeks later

      I think that’s actually pretty hilarious. So the price started inflated, hype ramped it up to almost double after the auction, then it crashed ~80% over a few weeks, and now it’s almost half that crashed price. Why are they still worth ~$50k?

      Screw everyone involved. I hope it’s a long, expensive lawsuit for everyone.

  • magnetosphere@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    For a moment, I was thinking that it’s easy to criticize NFTs with the benefit of hindsight. After all, throughout history, how many things were looked at as a fad or a waste of money before becoming huge?

    Then I remembered that people weren’t just griping about NFTs because they were new and different. Reasonable people had been making rational, educated criticisms of NFTs since day one. None of this was unexpected. NFTs turned out to be exactly the kind of scam that most people thought they were.

  • Sorchist@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Fuck all NFT people right in the earhole, but I think it’s reasonable to nail Sotheby’s to the wall for their part in this charade.

  • pizza-bagel@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    The way a lot of these NFTs fucked themselves over was promising something in addition to the NFT, like a game or whatever, that they never delivered on. If it was always “buy link to monkey pictures” and that’s it they could probably get away with it no problem

  • Scourge@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    NFT’s expand digital property rights and allow direct ownership of digital assets in ways that, for example, buying a game on steam doesn’t. That being said, why people wanted to have direct digital ownership of a 2D image of a monkey in various clothing… that’s where I got lost. I can easily understand buying like… a text book, or a video game, music, your copy of microsoft office as an NFT, y’know, things that would actually have a re-sale value to it? But why the fuck would you want a monkey picture?