World

Twitter founder’s auction of a tweet draws US$2 mil bid

Move a sign of growing appetite for NFTs

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 07 Mar 2021 12:00PM

Twitter founder’s auction of a tweet draws US$2 mil bid
The top bid yesterday for Jack Dorsey’s tweet – US$2 million – came from Justin Sun, the founder of TRON. – AFP pic, March 7, 2021

SAN FRANCISCO – Twitter boss Jack Dorsey is selling his first tweet at auction, with bidding yesterday reaching US$2 million (RM8 million) in a sign of the appetite for virtual objects authenticated through blockchain technology.

On March 21, 2006, Dorsey had tweeted: “just setting up my twttr.” 

On Friday, he posted a link to “Valuables @Cent”, an online marketplace for tweets where, the site says, investors or collectors can “buy and sell tweets autographed by their creators”. 

The top bid yesterday for Dorsey’s tweet – US$2 million – came from Justin Sun, the founder of TRON, a platform for blockchain, the technology underlying cryptocurrencies. He also heads the BitTorrent streaming platform. 

“The creator of a tweet decides if they would like to mint it on the blockchain, creating a 1-of-1 autographed version,” Valuables explains.  

Buying a tweet means purchasing “a digital certificate of the tweet, unique because it has been signed and verified by the creator”, according to Valuables.

In Dorsey’s case, the tweet itself remains visible to all, so long as he and Twitter leave it online.

The approach is much like the online sales of dramatic digital “moments” from National Basketball Association games; the short video sequences remain visible for free on the internet but a blockchain-backed “Non-Fungible Token” (NFT) is generated to guarantee the identity, authenticity and traceability of the video, confirming its value.

Thus, a 10-second clip showing a spectacular sequence by basketball superstar LeBron James fetched US$208,000 on the NBA Top Shot site late last month.

Top Shot has generated more than US$200 million in transactions this year, according to Dapper Labs, which partnered with the NBA to create Top Shot.

In 2019, Sun paid US$4.6 million in a winning bid to lunch with iconic billionaire Warren Buffett. Sun reportedly tried but failed to convince the elderly investor of the value of bitcoins.

NFTs have soared in popularity, to the point that prestigious auction house Christie’s last month sold an entirely digital artwork. – AFP, March 7, 2021

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