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Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey's first-ever tweet sold for $2.9 million as an NFT

Isabelle Lee   

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey's first-ever tweet sold for $2.9 million as an NFT
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey has sold his first-ever tweet for $2.9 million dollars as an non-fungible token, or NFT, on Monday.

The tweet, published on March 21, 2006, simply said: "just setting up my twttr." The first offer was made on December 15 and the bidding ended on March 21.

Dorsey first tweeted a link listing his tweet as an auction on March 5. On March 9, the executive said in a tweet that he will "immediately convert proceeds to bitcoin" and donate to nonprofit GiveDirectly's Africa response. Hours after the news broke, the executive posted a screenshot of his donation, thanking the buyer.

An NFT is a unique digital asset secured on a blockchain that has gained traction this year, in step with the rapidly rising popularity of cryptocurrencies. Each NFT has its own signature, which can be verified in the public ledger and cannot be duplicated.

When a person buys an NFT, they gain the rights to the unique token on the blockchain. For instance, if a person buys an image, a meme, or in this case, a tweet, they are not buying the content per se. In fact, they have no ownership of the artwork itself and have no control over the rights to distribution. Instead, they are buying the rights to the unique token that connects their name to the artwork.

"An NFTs value is largely derived as a function of scarcity and speculation," said Tom C.W. Lin, a professor at Temple University's Beasley School of Law told Insider. " An NFT itself does not have much intrinsic value beyond those factors."

Dorsey's tweet was auctioned on Valuables, a platform by Cent, a social media network built on blockchain. Tesla's Elon Musk has also listed a tweet on the same platform but has yet to sell it.

For Dorsey's tweet, it was bought using Ether for 1630.5825601 ETH, which was worth around $2,915,835 at the time it sold, Cent CEO and co-founder Cameron Hejazi confirmed to Reuters. Dorsey will receive 95% of the proceeds, while the remaining amount will go to Cent.

The buyer is Sina Estavi. Based on Estavi's Twitter biography, he is the CEO of blockchain company Bridge Oracle and is based in Malaysia.

Crypto art has been around for over half a decade but became mainstream only recently, with an auction by Christie's of a digital work for almost $70 million in February representing a watershed moment.

In the past month, over $1 billion has been spent on digital assets, according to data from CryptoSlam.

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