17/09/2021 This org wants to use NFTs for a new purpose: #MeToo activism

Storytelling platform Lioness is selling an NFT linked to an anonymous account that details allegations against spiritual leader Deepak Chopra.

This org wants to use NFTs for a new purpose: #MeToo activism

In March, a piece of digital art by graphic designer Beeple sold for $69 million at the auction house Christie’s. The sale was backed by an NFT, or nonfungible token, which secures ownership rights to artwork through a digital record of the transaction, much like how physical art changes hands. This year, the NFT craze has spawned sales in the hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars, be it for a New York Times story or Jack Dorsey’s first tweet or the Nyan Cat GIF.

For many NFT collectors, the objective is to help financially support artists and claim bragging rights for owning an original piece of digital art. But Ariella Steinhorn and Amber Scorah—who run the storytelling platform Lioness, which helps brings stories of workplace abuses to the media—saw an opportunity to capitalize on the enthusiasm for NFTs for a new purpose. “There was all these different ways that NFTs were being used and riffed on,” Scorah says. “And we noticed that no one had yet used them to bring attention to a social issue or to an individual story and kind of harness the power of the NFT for activism.”

Today, Lioness published an essay from an unnamed source detailing her experience seeking treatment in the late 1990s from wellness guru and alternative medicine practitioner Deepak Chopra, who she says allegedly pursued a sexual relationship with her while she was at the Chopra Center. Along with publishing the essay, Lioness has minted an NFT on the platform Foundation, using a diary page that the author wrote in 1998, back when the events she describes allegedly unfolded. 

In a cease and desist letter to Lioness, Chopra’s attorney vehemently denied the allegations and threatened legal action if they moved forward with publication. Chopra was not immediately available to comment for Fast Company. We will update this post when we hear back.

The diary had surfaced as Lioness vetted the author’s allegations. Steinhorn and Scorah felt the page offered both corroboration and a powerful reminder to readers that a real person was behind the allegations, despite her anonymity. “Here was the perfect visual artifact that illustrated exactly what this story was about,” Scorah says. “It was written by this young woman who was in her twenties at the time. It’s really raw, and it feels very authentic to the experience of a young woman who is confused and doesn’t understand exactly what she’s getting into, and is messed up about it.”

As a small firm, Lioness also had concerns about the potential legal repercussions of publishing an anonymous account with allegations against a deep-pocketed public figure like Chopra. (Lioness had courted several publications with the story, but they were unwilling to publish allegations from a single anonymous source.) To help protect both the author and Lioness, any proceeds from the sale of the NFT will be directed into a legal fund, for use in the event of a lawsuit or other legal action; bidding on the NFT will officially open next Thursday, September 23, at 1 p.m. ET. “We’re cementing it forever onto the blockchain,” Steinhorn says, “and in the process of doing that, hopefully, getting a bid that will allow us to continue this work.”

In some ways, Steinhorn says, this NFT is a spiritual successor to the one recently sold by model and writer Emily Ratajkowski, which was aptly titled “Buying Myself Back: A Model for Redistribution” and intended as a statement about who should profit from her image. (The NFT ended up selling for $175,000.) 

“It’s not a vanity project anymore,” Scorah says. “It’s not the artifact [or] object that is the goal. It’s actually a means of showing support, a means of trying to shift culture, a means of trying to hold powerful people accountable.”

Arts

https://www.fastcompany.com/90672406/leah-lamarr-clubhouse-hot-on-the-mic

Interesting NFTs
Fidenza #77
Fidenza is by far my most versatile algorithm to date. Although the program stays focused on structured curves and blocks, the varieties of scale, organization, texture, and color usage it can employ create a wide array of generative possibilities. Additional project feature(s) => Scale:Jumbo, Turbulence:High, Colors:Party Time, Have Margin:No, Spiral:No, Soft Shapes:No, Super Blocks:Yes, Collision Check:No Overlap, Outlined:No, Shape Angles:Curved, Density:High
Fuku-Shiva
The term “Fuku” refers to fortune or good luck. “Shiva” refers to the Hindu deity who represents strongly polar qualities, both severe and delicate. On a beach inspired by adventures on Phi Phi island in Thailand, three youths cavort. Two are representational figures and the third is psychologically rendered. A dynamic relationship ensues between the triad; a reciprocity of active and passive states. The boy on the right engages in maneuvers of evasion, defense, and is dressed in a speedo which reiterates the colors and symbolism of the caution tape on the left and upper right frame of the composition. In concurrent reaction the psychedelic figure shoots out a rocket powered paper airplane. The nude boy seated in the froth and sand approaches in passive repose, and is met with active attention but equal physical reserve by the psychedelic being. Perhaps the most naked figure is also the least representational. Looming large, dynamic, and active, it engages its companions playfully. Various symbols interject into the otherwise naturalistic scene, most notably a beach ball and two contaminated barrels nested in the sand. The upright barrel reads “FukuShima” in Kanji. The barrel laying down reads “Dharma”. To the left the scene is bounded by caution tape, reiterating the danger of the nuclear waste while also hosting alien archetypes, whose presence, as is the nature of these entities, runs up and just behind the consciousness of the psychedelic figure’s eggshell-like skull.
Hexenhalberd
A character from The Beacon
#78483
By OthersideDeployer
HUMAN ONE
be careful where you step.