TheAssociated Press, orAP, has announcedthat itâs startinga marketplaceto sell NFTs of its photojournalistsâ work in collaboration with a company called Xooa. Itâs billing its foray into NFTs as a way for collectors to âpurchase the news agencyâs award-winning contemporary and historic photojournalismâ and says that the virtual tokens will be released at âbroad and inclusive price pointsâ (though itâs hard to tell what types of prices resellers will want on theAPmarketplace).
The news outlet says its system will be built on the âenvironmentally friendlyâ Polygon blockchain and that the NFTs will âinclude a rich set of original metadataâ to tell buyers when, where, and how the photos were taken. It says its first collection, launching January 31st, will include NFTs featuring photos of âspace, climate, war and other images to spotlights on the work of specificAPphotographers.â
Other journalistic enterprises have experimented with NFTs
APisnât the first journalistic enterprise to use or express interest in NFTs.Quartz andThe New York Timeshave sold copies of their articles as NFTs, and Getty Imagesâ CEO Craig Peterssaid in Decemberthat thereâs âa real opportunityâ for the company when it comes to NFTs. We probably wonât see people debating whether to get a Getty or anAPNFT anytime soon, though, as the former seems to be taking a more wait-and-see approach, with Peters saying that he didnât feel the need to race into the space. So far, though, this does seem like one of the largest NFT-related efforts from a major news source.
It doesnât seem likeAPis trying to sell its NFTs as a metaverse tie-in (either as part of a virtual museum or as decorations inan online accounting office), like other media executivesin the music industry may be interested in doing. Its announcement andFAQmake no mention ofthe metaverse(outside of mentioning that Xooa also works with brands on âmetaverse strategiesâ in the âAbout Xooaâ section), and the project seems entirely aimed at collectors who want to, as the press release puts it, âseamlessly buy, sell and trade officialAPdigital collectibles through the marketplace.â
âPulitzer Dropsâ will âhave increased scarcity to preserve their statusâ
Buyers will be able to pay for NFTs from the market using either credit cards or Ethereum âAPsays the MetaMask will be the first wallet supported but that there are plans to add support for others. There will be virtual queues to buy NFTs as theyâre released byAP, with âPulitzer Dropsâ containing more limited-edition NFTs happening every two weeks â the FAQ says these particular images will âhave increased scarcity to preserve their status.â Buyers will be able to resell those NFTs on the siteâs secondary market.
APsays that the proceeds from the NFTsâ sale will be used to fund its journalistic endeavors. Itâll also get revenue whenever theyâre resold on its marketplace â the FAQ says thereâs a 10 percent fee associated with reselling, and Xooa spokesperson Lauren Easton toldThe Vergein an email that the two companies would share that fee. (The transaction fees, or âgasâ fees, thatEthereum is infamous forshouldnât add too much to the price of sales, as theyâre significantly lower on Polygon.) Easton also told us that the âphotographers will share in all revenue collected,â but didn't specify what their cut would be.
The marketplace has an early access waitlist scheme
APsays its marketplace is set to open on January 31st, but it does seem to be offering a sort of early access scheme; the landing page for the marketplace says you can get on a waitlist and that you can get âpriority accessâ and a higher waitlist ranking if you refer others to sign up. If youâre the type of collectorAPis targeting with these offerings (or youâre someone interested in how this type of marketplace will work), itâs worth doing a thorough read ofthe FAQâ it gets into how Xooa is planning on adding support for moving the NFTs to other marketplaces, talks about how the drops will work, and has tons of detail about the marketplace, account system, and the seller verification processes.