• Nougat@fedia.io
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    10 months ago

    One of the things blockchain could do is become a digital proof of ownership, augmenting or replacing things like property deeds and car titles. We already agree that a written record of ownership of such things is legally binding (even if the writing is stored digitally), but transfer of that ownership to another person is still a very manual process. Imagine an NFT that represents ownership of your house, and when you want to sell your house, you transfer that NFT to someone else’s custody - adding their ownership information to it. It would record the entire chain of ownership, and specific details about the piece of property involved.

    • 4am@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      And who would the largest nodes on that blockchain be? The banks? Who could say and do whatever they conspired since they command >50% of the computing power and/or value?

      The average person isn’t going to build a fucking blockchain node just to keep the deed to their house.

      “Grandma, please you need to fill your basement with these ASICs or else script kiddies will steal your house”

      • Nougat@fedia.io
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        10 months ago

        That’s not how that works.

        NFT is issued determining ownership to a property. Property sells, another NFT is issued, tied to the original one to maintain a chain of ownership. Issuance of a second NFT for a sale to a new owner would depend on authorization by the previous NFT holder. Lienholder information could also be stored, and linked to a mortgage NFT with payment history.

        The “NF” part of that stands for “non-fungible.” As in, once created, cannot be changed.