National Geographichaslaunched its first NFTson Polygon and posted a detailed explainer of the technology on social media—prompting outright rage from hundreds of fans of the 135-year-old nature-centric magazine responding with rage.
NatGeo’s Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook accounts posted animageof a Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) NFT Monday with a caption detailing the rise ofNFTs, which are unique blockchain tokens that signify ownership.
The social media posts were designed to prepare the magazine’s mainstream audience for itsown NFT droponPolygon, which dropped Tuesday and features work from 16 different photographers including Justin Aversano, Reuben Wu, Cath Simard, and John Knopf.
Today is the day! Nat Geo’s Genesis collection ‘GM: Daybreak Around the World’ will go on sale at 12pm PT / 3pm ET!https://t.co/03vvZMbCB0pic.twitter.com/Sdhfcv7bBK
— Nat Geo Photography (@NatGeoPhotos)January 17, 2023
The response to NatGeo merely mentioning NFTs on its social media accounts was met with an overwhelming number of negative comments, calling NFTs a “bubble” that “already popped,” “bullshit,” “an extinct species,” and even “another way to launder.”
Many urged NatGeo to “delete this.”
Others asserted that NFTs were an outright “scam,” effectively throwing the whole technology itself under the bus—even though people, not the technology, create NFTphishing scamsand “rug pulls.”
Even the manager of acclaimed photographer Ansel Adams’accountchimed into the conversation, replying to NatGeo’s Instagram post about NFTs with a simple “Nope.”
This kind of NFT backlash,sansnuance, is far from new. Netflix sawfalloutlast year when it created free NFTs as a part of its promotions for the latest season of “Stranger Things.” And thevideo game industryhas seen continued, consistentbacklashfrom gaming publications and gamers themselves who despise the technology.
It seems that the general public’s perception of NFTs hasn’t changed. TheEthereum Merge, which was executed in September 2022, didn’t do much to appease those convinced that NFTs were bad for the environment, either, despite the fact that the Ethereum Merge reduced ETH’s energy consumption by99.998%, per Ethereum Foundation data.
NatGeo has a massive following, with 256 million on Instagram, 49 million on Facebook, and well over 28.6 million on Twitter. Despite all the hate, though, its Instagram post about NFTs still received over 100,000 likes.
Despite the flurry of rage, it is notable that NatGeo has chosen to launch NFTs at a time where NFT trading volume is a sliver of what it once was. According to a Dune Analyticsdashboard, Polygon saw just $15.39 million in total NFT volume traded on OpenSea last month, a dramatic 80.5% decrease from its all-time high of roughly $79.45 million a year ago.
While the majority of the more than 3,000 Instagram comments and nearly 200 Facebook comments were negative, some NFT artists chimed in to suggest that the majority of dissenters simply weren’t educated enough about NFTs.
“Welcome to the comment section, here you’ll witness a sea of people hating on what they don’t understand in their natural habitat,” wrote artistRyan Hawthorne, who has released Ethereum NFTs with prestigious auction house Sotheby’s.
“It’s a shame most people commenting negatives takes here won’t have taken the time to learn about the useful applications and problems the tech is solving/has the potential to solve,” said Betty, the pseudonymous cofounder of Ethereum NFT project Deadfellaz.
Not all the NFT creators and artists who responded came to NatGeo’s defense. TheNFT artistChuck Anderson, who goes by the name nopattern, criticized the magazine for using an image of a BAYC NFT.
“Of all the incredible projects, artists, and concepts in the NFT ecosystem, BAYC is far and away the corniest and most tasteless example,” Anderson wrote. “Bummer [that] this is what people who haven’t hopped in are still being fed.”
Those interested in minting NatGeo NFTs have also reported technical problems. The mint, engineered by NFT platform Snowcrash, appears to be facing ongoing technical issues.
https://decrypt.co/119392/national-geographic-nft-launch-mint-backlash-technical-problems