Defi Dives: Ribbon Protocol
Disclaimer I am a member of Ribbon DAO and use the protocol. None of what I say here should be taken as investment advice, this is simply an examination of how the platform works.I want to start doing some dives into Defi protocols and products. This can be as much a learning opportunity for me as you dear reader. It gives me a chance to break down topics into concepts easier to understand and examine for those of us who aren’t far right on the IQ bell curve (I know where I am located…hint it...
Sol Breakpoint 2021
First of all, let’s get the important stuff out of the way… GMMy fav piece of ‘merch’ all week 😂 thank you Slope & the dude walking around with these in his hair. I was lucky enough to attend Sol Breakpoint in Lisbon this year. I was there on a personal and professional basis both as an angel investor and to represent New Finance :)I wanted to write a bit about my experience, to share my views with others and also, for my own sake, document the event. To share some of the interesting compani...
Judges, Law, Code, Flexibility? - Kieran Parker-Moroney - Medium
I was listening to Tim Ferriss’ interview with Balajis the other day and he is discussing the idea that code is law. Balajis proposes that courts can become better via smart-contracts. Balajis shared some thoughts below:So in a sense it’s a violation of equal protection, every time somebody with the same facts walks into a Wyoming court and gets different justice, for example, than a Milwaukee court or a Minnesota court, whatever. Every time that happens on something that’s supposed to be uni...
Head of Strategy at NeoSwap Advisor @ New Finance VC, @ Redbrain Interested in learning. Art collector, investor, DeFi obsessed, golfer.
Defi Dives: Ribbon Protocol
Disclaimer I am a member of Ribbon DAO and use the protocol. None of what I say here should be taken as investment advice, this is simply an examination of how the platform works.I want to start doing some dives into Defi protocols and products. This can be as much a learning opportunity for me as you dear reader. It gives me a chance to break down topics into concepts easier to understand and examine for those of us who aren’t far right on the IQ bell curve (I know where I am located…hint it...
Sol Breakpoint 2021
First of all, let’s get the important stuff out of the way… GMMy fav piece of ‘merch’ all week 😂 thank you Slope & the dude walking around with these in his hair. I was lucky enough to attend Sol Breakpoint in Lisbon this year. I was there on a personal and professional basis both as an angel investor and to represent New Finance :)I wanted to write a bit about my experience, to share my views with others and also, for my own sake, document the event. To share some of the interesting compani...
Judges, Law, Code, Flexibility? - Kieran Parker-Moroney - Medium
I was listening to Tim Ferriss’ interview with Balajis the other day and he is discussing the idea that code is law. Balajis proposes that courts can become better via smart-contracts. Balajis shared some thoughts below:So in a sense it’s a violation of equal protection, every time somebody with the same facts walks into a Wyoming court and gets different justice, for example, than a Milwaukee court or a Minnesota court, whatever. Every time that happens on something that’s supposed to be uni...
Head of Strategy at NeoSwap Advisor @ New Finance VC, @ Redbrain Interested in learning. Art collector, investor, DeFi obsessed, golfer.

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I have been thinking a lot recently about how NFT marketplaces will evolve, especially as it feels like every other deck I see is some form of marketplace.
Then today I saw a debate between two very intelligent people in the space, whose opinions I have grown to respect.
I wanted to share my thoughts (some of which are borrowed from them).
I don’t currently have a conclusion but this is how I am viewing the different options and issues facing the NFT Marketplace space.
Problem - There are SO many marketplaces
The buzz around NFTs has been awesome, but that has meant there is a proliferation of marketplaces, some are similar (i.e Opensea and LooksRare) and others offer more specialised services such as curated content, ‘fine’ art, liquidity pools or fractionalised pieces: SuperRare, Rarible, Foundation, NFTX and Fractional come to mind.
Speaking of, as I type this, I just found out at x2y2.io…
Then you also have L2 marketplaces emerging on Arbitrum (i.e. Agora)and Optimism (Quixotic) and other L2’s such as Immutable X.
Don’t forget to go cross-chain if you are a real collectooooor- maybe you are looking on Solana at: Solsea, Magic Eden, Metaplex etc or Avalanche with YetiSwap or Tezos with OBJKT & Hic Et Nunc. Oh and NEAR with… well you get the point.
So the question is what happens? Does it all move to aggregators? Does it all become centralised or do we have individuation and different platforms compete in the open market and offer different benefits.
Let’s examine a few of the options and some pros/cons:
Aggregators:

We haven’t seen much in this space yet for NFT Marketplaces, there are some but they haven’t captured meaningful volume yet. Gem.xyz is one I was just introduced to.
The basic premise is they plugin to different marketplaces and show you a fuller picture of the marketplace.
In the Defi world we have already seen the popularity of these DEX aggregators like 1inch and Matcha, with rising volume.
Why could aggregators become popular?:
With an easy UX people will get access to the widest market options, if you provide depth of liqudity
NFTs aren’t physical products and so the moat around stock is not the same as physical products
There are so many exchanges now, it is extremely challenging to keep up with where the best buy/sell price is available.
You could incentivise use with tokenomics and partnerships beneficial to the platforms too.
And why wouldn’t this work? :
Network effects, if someone like Opensea builds up a meaningful moat if can be extremely hard to displace them. The example I saw used in the debate was Ebay. Ebay isn’t a great experience for buyers/sellers but people know it is where the most buyers/sellers are which reinforces their advantage.
We have seen a few failed attempts to take volume from OS for example Infinity.xyz which didn’t make a dent. The closest so far has been LooksRare and I will be interested to see how this unfolds
Security issues — we have already seen issues and exploits on Opensea and other platforms on other chains. If you can’t guarantee the safety of an individual platform, would you want to expose your wallet and sign approvals to an aggregator connected to multiple platforms?
Technical issues like sorting royalty payments, transaction fees, allowing cross-chain purchases etc
I have been thinking about aggregators in Web 2 as an anology. Propety is non-fungible, and agents all have their own websites and listings, but they also all list on aggregators like Zoopla and OnTheMarket, or Zillow in the US.
What are some other ways I could see this playing out?
1. Centralisation wins
‘Nooooooooo’ to centralisation, that is against out ethos right? Well it could happen. Opensea is the easy example, but look at platforms like Coinbase launching its NFT market. They have access to millions of users, your average retail user ‘trusts’ them and doesn’t care about decentralisation.
If they end up having the most buyers and sellers, we are back to the marketplace issue- why would you go anywhere else? You can get the best price and sell or buy quickly.
I’d argue, on ETH at least, right now that the NFT market is largely centralised around Opensea anyway and we can see how hard it has been to unseat them. So perhaps they, or someone like Coinbase, becomes the leviathan that dominates like eBay and is nigh-on impossible to beat.
Generally it is a lot easier to build a really quality UI on a centralised platform too, which makes the user experience so much cleaner and them less likely to use other platforms. (Opensea isn’t doing much to make this case convincing though…)
Bear in mind here, centralistion doesn’t necessrily mean a centralised platform it can also just mean a decentralised platform that dominates the market. for example Universe.xyz launches and takes 95% of the market.
2. Individuation
One thing that is intersting in the NFT space is the variation, both in the offerings of NFTs and also in how they can be packaged.
I wonder whether you will end up with ‘niche’ markets and marketplaces. The opposite of ‘the everything store’.
We have seen a bit of this already with platforms alluded to earlier. You could see platforms appealing to smaller markets such as: 1/1 pieces, small editions, gaming NFTs, curated artists, decentralised platforms, fractionalisation, liquidity providers, index investments etc.
People can go to different places to service their specific goals and each platform can incentivise users to use them individually (different reward systems).
Platforms here include one previously aluded to: Foundation, Superare, Rarible, Universe.xyz, NFTX, Immutable X.
I don’t have a conclusion on how this battle with play out right now but interested to hear other peoples thoughts or if there are options that I have missed here.
I have been thinking a lot recently about how NFT marketplaces will evolve, especially as it feels like every other deck I see is some form of marketplace.
Then today I saw a debate between two very intelligent people in the space, whose opinions I have grown to respect.
I wanted to share my thoughts (some of which are borrowed from them).
I don’t currently have a conclusion but this is how I am viewing the different options and issues facing the NFT Marketplace space.
Problem - There are SO many marketplaces
The buzz around NFTs has been awesome, but that has meant there is a proliferation of marketplaces, some are similar (i.e Opensea and LooksRare) and others offer more specialised services such as curated content, ‘fine’ art, liquidity pools or fractionalised pieces: SuperRare, Rarible, Foundation, NFTX and Fractional come to mind.
Speaking of, as I type this, I just found out at x2y2.io…
Then you also have L2 marketplaces emerging on Arbitrum (i.e. Agora)and Optimism (Quixotic) and other L2’s such as Immutable X.
Don’t forget to go cross-chain if you are a real collectooooor- maybe you are looking on Solana at: Solsea, Magic Eden, Metaplex etc or Avalanche with YetiSwap or Tezos with OBJKT & Hic Et Nunc. Oh and NEAR with… well you get the point.
So the question is what happens? Does it all move to aggregators? Does it all become centralised or do we have individuation and different platforms compete in the open market and offer different benefits.
Let’s examine a few of the options and some pros/cons:
Aggregators:

We haven’t seen much in this space yet for NFT Marketplaces, there are some but they haven’t captured meaningful volume yet. Gem.xyz is one I was just introduced to.
The basic premise is they plugin to different marketplaces and show you a fuller picture of the marketplace.
In the Defi world we have already seen the popularity of these DEX aggregators like 1inch and Matcha, with rising volume.
Why could aggregators become popular?:
With an easy UX people will get access to the widest market options, if you provide depth of liqudity
NFTs aren’t physical products and so the moat around stock is not the same as physical products
There are so many exchanges now, it is extremely challenging to keep up with where the best buy/sell price is available.
You could incentivise use with tokenomics and partnerships beneficial to the platforms too.
And why wouldn’t this work? :
Network effects, if someone like Opensea builds up a meaningful moat if can be extremely hard to displace them. The example I saw used in the debate was Ebay. Ebay isn’t a great experience for buyers/sellers but people know it is where the most buyers/sellers are which reinforces their advantage.
We have seen a few failed attempts to take volume from OS for example Infinity.xyz which didn’t make a dent. The closest so far has been LooksRare and I will be interested to see how this unfolds
Security issues — we have already seen issues and exploits on Opensea and other platforms on other chains. If you can’t guarantee the safety of an individual platform, would you want to expose your wallet and sign approvals to an aggregator connected to multiple platforms?
Technical issues like sorting royalty payments, transaction fees, allowing cross-chain purchases etc
I have been thinking about aggregators in Web 2 as an anology. Propety is non-fungible, and agents all have their own websites and listings, but they also all list on aggregators like Zoopla and OnTheMarket, or Zillow in the US.
What are some other ways I could see this playing out?
1. Centralisation wins
‘Nooooooooo’ to centralisation, that is against out ethos right? Well it could happen. Opensea is the easy example, but look at platforms like Coinbase launching its NFT market. They have access to millions of users, your average retail user ‘trusts’ them and doesn’t care about decentralisation.
If they end up having the most buyers and sellers, we are back to the marketplace issue- why would you go anywhere else? You can get the best price and sell or buy quickly.
I’d argue, on ETH at least, right now that the NFT market is largely centralised around Opensea anyway and we can see how hard it has been to unseat them. So perhaps they, or someone like Coinbase, becomes the leviathan that dominates like eBay and is nigh-on impossible to beat.
Generally it is a lot easier to build a really quality UI on a centralised platform too, which makes the user experience so much cleaner and them less likely to use other platforms. (Opensea isn’t doing much to make this case convincing though…)
Bear in mind here, centralistion doesn’t necessrily mean a centralised platform it can also just mean a decentralised platform that dominates the market. for example Universe.xyz launches and takes 95% of the market.
2. Individuation
One thing that is intersting in the NFT space is the variation, both in the offerings of NFTs and also in how they can be packaged.
I wonder whether you will end up with ‘niche’ markets and marketplaces. The opposite of ‘the everything store’.
We have seen a bit of this already with platforms alluded to earlier. You could see platforms appealing to smaller markets such as: 1/1 pieces, small editions, gaming NFTs, curated artists, decentralised platforms, fractionalisation, liquidity providers, index investments etc.
People can go to different places to service their specific goals and each platform can incentivise users to use them individually (different reward systems).
Platforms here include one previously aluded to: Foundation, Superare, Rarible, Universe.xyz, NFTX, Immutable X.
I don’t have a conclusion on how this battle with play out right now but interested to hear other peoples thoughts or if there are options that I have missed here.
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