It’s been a few years of big promises on how NFTs are going to revolutionise the royalty world. Today there is an unfathomable amount of digital marketplaces for images, that sell randomly generated shit. There is about fifty music NFT publishing platforms, every single one of them doxxing their artists and most of them requiring artists to pass their curation test before being able to publish their work. I haven’t found one decent video NFT publishing platform, nor a podcast destination.
For text there’s an abundance, but mirror.xyz is doing a great job of keeping it simple.
For now, the problem of ownership and direct relationship with a fan remains unsolved. An artist is forced to use web2 platforms for exposure, not being able to own his content there, nor monetise it directly.
Until someone comes along with a simple way of minting your content, self-hosting and publishing it, I came up with this toolset for my artistic practice.
I am going to publish my stuff on web2 platforms and then mint entries on mirror with links to my content.
That way, if someone wants to support me, they can do so by collecting the mirror.xyz entry.
This is the first one, here I am publishing a link to my podcast.
This was recorded during the decompression event after Lampu, a Bali Burn event where I have built an interactive political rally simulator: “Sack the Tyrant”.
I am sharing my vision, my path and the importance of recognising the subconscious fears, that govern our lives without our knowledge.
If you want to support my future artistic work - collect this entry. All the money will be donated to a charity restoring Ukraine and I will have another reason to carry on.
It’s been a few years of big promises on how NFTs are going to revolutionise the royalty world. Today there is an unfathomable amount of digital marketplaces for images, that sell randomly generated shit. There is about fifty music NFT publishing platforms, every single one of them doxxing their artists and most of them requiring artists to pass their curation test before being able to publish their work. I haven’t found one decent video NFT publishing platform, nor a podcast destination.
For text there’s an abundance, but mirror.xyz is doing a great job of keeping it simple.
For now, the problem of ownership and direct relationship with a fan remains unsolved. An artist is forced to use web2 platforms for exposure, not being able to own his content there, nor monetise it directly.
Until someone comes along with a simple way of minting your content, self-hosting and publishing it, I came up with this toolset for my artistic practice.
I am going to publish my stuff on web2 platforms and then mint entries on mirror with links to my content.
That way, if someone wants to support me, they can do so by collecting the mirror.xyz entry.
This is the first one, here I am publishing a link to my podcast.
This was recorded during the decompression event after Lampu, a Bali Burn event where I have built an interactive political rally simulator: “Sack the Tyrant”.
I am sharing my vision, my path and the importance of recognising the subconscious fears, that govern our lives without our knowledge.
If you want to support my future artistic work - collect this entry. All the money will be donated to a charity restoring Ukraine and I will have another reason to carry on.
Fear is the Mind Killer 0.2
In the swirling chaos of post-Soviet Russia, I was raised with the understanding that the government was an entity so alien and detached from our daily grind that there was no bloody point in mingling. Instead, we tackled the relentless torrent of challenges that flooded our days, never seeking aid from the faceless authorities. This way of thinking sculpted a generation of souls who believed that as long as they didn't rattle the government's cage, they would be left to wander in t...
Isa - My Chechen Friend
In my childhood, Chechnya was the first real war I had heard of. It was happening as I went to school. Mutilated soldiers were coming home, and we had all sorts of myths about the dangerous Chechen separatists floating around. In 1999, four apartment block bombings across Russia led the ex-FSB director and then Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to blame the Chechen separatists and start the second Chechen War. A move that eventually earned him his presidency. There is substantial evidence that th...
Svoboda
Svoboda means freedom in Slavic languages. It's one of those rare words that sounds the same across most of those languages. It is spelled and pronounced similarly in Roman scripts, such as Polish (swoboda) and Czech (svoboda). Moreover, it is spelled the same (свобода) in most Cyrillic languages, such as Bulgarian, Ukrainian and Russian. However, the precise meanings of freedom and svoboda feel slightly different. In my quest to pinpoint that difference, I dug into the etymologies of sv...
Fear is the Mind Killer 0.2
In the swirling chaos of post-Soviet Russia, I was raised with the understanding that the government was an entity so alien and detached from our daily grind that there was no bloody point in mingling. Instead, we tackled the relentless torrent of challenges that flooded our days, never seeking aid from the faceless authorities. This way of thinking sculpted a generation of souls who believed that as long as they didn't rattle the government's cage, they would be left to wander in t...
Isa - My Chechen Friend
In my childhood, Chechnya was the first real war I had heard of. It was happening as I went to school. Mutilated soldiers were coming home, and we had all sorts of myths about the dangerous Chechen separatists floating around. In 1999, four apartment block bombings across Russia led the ex-FSB director and then Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to blame the Chechen separatists and start the second Chechen War. A move that eventually earned him his presidency. There is substantial evidence that th...
Svoboda
Svoboda means freedom in Slavic languages. It's one of those rare words that sounds the same across most of those languages. It is spelled and pronounced similarly in Roman scripts, such as Polish (swoboda) and Czech (svoboda). Moreover, it is spelled the same (свобода) in most Cyrillic languages, such as Bulgarian, Ukrainian and Russian. However, the precise meanings of freedom and svoboda feel slightly different. In my quest to pinpoint that difference, I dug into the etymologies of sv...
<100 subscribers
<100 subscribers
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
No comments yet