The all-powerful NFT lets anyone create an immutable, single record on a decentralized ledger that can be followed by anyone. This opens up the door to digital ownership like nothing else. Its adoption has been remarkable, particularly in the digital art community.
However, there is a very large elephant in this room. Despite the fact that it is able to attribute ownership, still has a huge problem with plagiarism. An army of criminals are stealing art online and minting it for their own use, often without the original artist knowing. It is not possible to prove the identity of the uploader.
I have been stolen art to submit on Open sea as #NFT ,
— Devil-Nutto (✨Commission Closed to clear old✨) (@devilly_d) December 28, 2021
Please. help me to report them YvY Thank youhttps://t.co/DvDM7RKUHq#NFTTHAILAND #NFTs #NFTCommmunity #digitalart #opensea pic.twitter.com/tnuqBblBkW
One Twitter group has made a valiant attempt to make things right in their own way, despite the fact that there is no one to enforce this flagrant wrongdoing. NFTheft has created a log of non-fungible chicanery. A repository where anyone can upload details about fraudulent NFT activity in hopes that they can make legitimate changes with enough people.
This is obviously not enough to stop the avalanche of deplorable tokens. The information they gather could be invaluable in the fight ahead.