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The DAO previously proposed a lawsuit against Azuki creator Zagabond over a dilutive $39 million NFT minting that took place in June.
Azuki DAO, an unofficial community decentralized autonomous organization surrounding the namesake nonfungible token collection, has announced its rebranding to “Bean" as it drops a proposed lawsuit against the NFT collection’s founder, Zagabond, over a $39 million minting affair.
In a statement sent to Cointelegraph, Azuki developers said the DAO will rebrand into a memecoin project and become part of the Ethereum layer-2 Blast ecosystem. Developers also claims that Bean has also secured $10 million from “prominent investors” for its development and acceleration within the Blast ecosystem.
The proposed Bean memecoin will have a total supply of 1 billion. Forty percent of tokens are allocated to its treasury, 50% to Azuki DAO members, and 10% to Azuki NFT creator Zagabond. Minting is only available to Azuki NFT holders, who must do so within 24 hours of the token’s launch or face “token burn.”
The Azuki NFT collection represents 10,000 anime-themed profile pictures (PFPs). In June, a second series of 10,000 PFPs in the Azuki collection, dubbed “Elementals,” was released by Zagabond. Immediately after release, however, users noticed the close resemblance of Elemental PFPs to Azuki PFPs, thereby leading to the dilution of the latter through an increase in supply.
The price of Azuki NFTs reportedly fell 44% in the immediate aftermath of Elementals’ release. The move also triggered a community lawsuit proposal launched by Azuki DAO against creator Zagabond.
“Detailed information on financing and a roadmap for future developments will be disclosed shortly,” developers wrote.
Godspeed @cz_binance pic.twitter.com/jIaCj43sx8
— ZAGABOND.ETH (@ZAGABOND) November 21, 2023
Related: AzukiDAO proposes to recover 20,000 ETH from Azuki founder ‘Zagabond’
A savvy trader has admitted to bagging $1.5 million worth of Ethereum after outsmarting a bot on non-fungible token (NFT) marketplace Blur. Pseudonymous trader Hanwe Chang said that he noticed someone using a bot to copy all of his trades on Blur, and formulated a plan to take advantage. As explained by pseudonymous trader A-Raving-Ape.eth […]
The post NFT Trader Nets 800 Ethereum (ETH) Worth Almost $1,500,000 After Executing Perfect Plan To Trick Bot appeared first on The Daily Hodl.
The floor prices for some of the largest NFT collections sunk to nearly two-year lows, but have started to edge up in the past 24 hours.
The largest nonfungible token (NFT) collections by market capitalization are in a sea of red as the cheapest NFTs in their collections took dives over the past week with some hitting near two-year lows.
Yuga Labs’ flagship Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) collection — the second largest by market cap according to CoinGecko — hit a floor price of 27.7 Ether (ETH), or $54,200 on July 3, a level not seen since September 2021.
Other top collections including the Mutant Ape Yacht Club (MAYC), Azuki, CryptoPunks and DeGods also saw their floor prices sink over the week.
However, the last 24 hours have given the NFT holders a small respite, with floor prices recovering across most of the top collections. The largest gainer was Azuki Elementals with a nearly 32% floor price increase.
Swiss-based bank Credit Suisse said on July 3 that it’s teaming up with the Swiss Football Association to fire off 756 Ethereum NFTs with 100% of the proceeds going to support women's soccer in the country.
It’s the first time the bank has waded into NFTs, which will be made available through the bank's CSX app that’s adding a new functionality for digital assets — no crypto or crypto wallet required.
Instead, Swiss francs will be used to purchase the NFT which will appear in the app. The bank said this “first step” was meant to be “simple and client-friendly” so a “broad client base” could access digital assets.
As for the NFTs, each one portrays a player from the Swiss Women's National Team and come with varying levels of perks and benefits depending on their rarity.
There are three rarity levels with 690 of the least rare starting at around $170 while the 11 most rare are priced at over $11,000 (150 to 10,000 Swiss francs).
Former First Lady of the United States, Melania Trump, is seeing sluggish sales for her all-American Solana NFT collection, which was released ahead of the country’s Independence Day celebrations.
Of the 3,000 NFTs released June 29, only 586 have sold — which doesn’t include an additional 500 that are not yet revealed and held back from sale until July 4.
Of those revealed, the “1776 Collection” has six different designs emblazoned with patriotic symbols. Each design has 500 apiece and are being hawked off for $50 a pop.
"The 1776 Collection of artwork draws inspiration from several iconic landmarks of our Nation, which I had the privilege of visiting during the time I served as First Lady" #MelaniaTrump#The1776Collection exclusively at https://t.co/d2es7j6pwb#FoxNews: https://t.co/HSBeQj8QPc pic.twitter.com/Cu5ruzP4VH
— USAmemorabilia (@USAmemorabilia) June 29, 2023
A June 29 Fox News article reported the collection was to celebrate the "foundations of American ideals" according to Trump’s office.
A different audio track is embedded in each NFT design that blares patriotic tunes. One depicting the Statue of Liberty sounds off The Star-Spangled Banner, the U.S. national anthem.
It was reported a portion of proceeds from the collection will go to Trump’s “Fostering the Future” non-profit initiative aiming to grant scholarships in computer science to children leaving foster care.
A new product from French luxury brand Dior will come with an NFT, but the brand is seemingly being coy about the term "NFT" in its launch announcement.
On June 30, Dior announced it would be shipping a new line of shoes — with one style offering a “digital twin.”
Dior describes the twin e-shoes as “a unique and secure digital creation on the Ethereum blockchain” — wordplay which seems to deliberately obscure that the “digital twin” is simply an Ethereum-based NFT.
Sneakers Alert.
— Dior (@Dior) June 29, 2023
Introducing 'B33' sneakers by Kim Jones, from the #DiorMenFall 2023 collection. Each pair is equipped with an encrypted key granting access to a secure platform and exclusive services. Sign up to be the first to shop them online from July 6.
The shoes are called the “B33 sneaker” and come in seven different styles. Only the most expensive, priced at $2,150, come with the NFT twin.
Related: Yes, the Secret Service has an NFT collection, and no, it’s not for sale
The others, starting at the bargain price of $1,600, come with an NFC chip in the sole of the right shoe granting access to a “platform” showing its “Digital Certificate of Authenticity.” It’s unclear if this certificate is also an NFT.
NFT thieves are often quick to offload phished tokens, with blockchain security firm PeckShield finding that half of stolen NFTs are sold within three hours on OpenSea and Blur.
Hermès, another French luxury brand, racked up another win in its infringement case against the “MetaBirkin” NFT artist Mason Rothschild with a U.S. judge ordering a permanent injunction on all sales of the NFT.
NFT Collector: Snoop’s NFT nostalgia, The Goose draws Gen Y to Sotheby’s
The logo for a popular Yuga Labs NFT collection is being changed after it was seemingly ripped off from a follow-along children's drawing creator.
The logo for the Bored Ape Kennel Club (BAKC) from nonfungible token (NFT) conglomerate Yuga Labs is getting a refresh after recently surfaced allegations of intellectual property theft.
Yuga co-founder, Greg Solano, more widely known as “Garga” tweeted on Feb. 18 that the BAKC logo would be changing and the project would “debut the new logo soon.”
Saw the claims today about the BAKC logo. This was news to us and we're still investigating the situation. Have reached out to the freelancer we hired for that design and Easy Drawing Guides. We’ll be changing the logo and updating it on our site / ask marketplaces to change as… https://t.co/OwtflDXehz
— Garga.eth (Greg Solano) (@CryptoGarga) February 18, 2023
Yuga has been in the doghouse over its trademarked logo as it looks remarkably similar to the finished product of a follow-along drawing guide made for children by a company called Easy Drawing Guides.
Easy Drawing Guides released a wolf skull drawing guide on April 5, 2021, a little over two months prior to BAKC’s June 17, 2021 launch. The firm has asserted its intellectual property rights over the drawing.
Thanks for bringing this up @Jdotcolombo. @yugalabs doesn't have a license to the wolf skull drawing. The intellectual property rights for the drawing belong to Easy Drawing Guides as it's our original drawing and protected by our Terms and Conditions.
— Easy Drawing Guides (@easydrawinguide) February 17, 2023
Solano said the whole debacle “was news to us,” adding Yuga was “still investigating the situation” and had contacted Easy Drawing Guides and the freelance artist contracted for the design.
NFT sales over the past seven days have skyrocketed amid a battle for domination between OpenSea and its rival Blur — with the two sparring over fees and creator royalties.
According to data from NFT aggregator CryptoSlam, NFT sales volume has increased over 101% in the past week compared to the week prior and has hit over $524 million transacted in the last seven days at the time of writing.
One of the key factors in the rise was Blur’s token airdrop on Feb. 14 giving users the incentive to farm the drop by using the platform.
Blur has remained the dominant marketplace in terms of trading volume since the start of the year and has dominated OpenSea in that regard.
Analytics from DappRadar show the trend continuing over the past week — with Blur seeing nearly $400 million in volume compared to OpenSea’s $105 million.
OpenSea has recently spun up a comeback campaign and has slashed its platform fee to zero, enacted optional creator royalties and more lenient blocks on other marketplaces.
The pseudonymous NFT collector known as “Franklin” has made a "fat-finger" mistake bidding on a collection, which saw him accidentally bidding more than 21 times the floor price of an NFT.
On Feb. 19, Franklin owned up to the bungled purchase, which saw him buy an NFT from the Azuki project’s BEANZ collection for 35 ETH — or around $60,000 at the time — despite the floor price being around 1.7 ETH, or $2,800.
As you may already know, I placed a fat-finger collection offer of 35 ETH on Beanz. I meant to type a much lower bid with a quantity of 35, but I instead bid 35 ETH for 1 purchase (floor of like 1.73 ETH at the time). It got accepted before I could cancel.
— Franklin (@franklinisbored) February 19, 2023
Oops.
I’ll be okay.
He said he “placed a fat-finger collection offer” on the BEANZ collection but was actually meant to input a “much lower bid with a quantity of 35.”
“I instead bid 35 ETH for 1 purchase [...] It got accepted before I could cancel. Oops. I’ll be okay.” Franklin tweeted.
It however appears that Franklin was the owner of Bean #10626 for only a short time as just two hours after the blundered purchase it was sold for just 1.77 WETH — an equivalent loss of nearly $56,000.
An initially free NFT collection launched by the global cafe chain Starbucks is now seeing NFTs inexplicitly list for thousands of dollars just two months after the initial mint.
The Starbucks Odyssey Polygon NFT collection is a rewards program launched in December 2022, still in closed beta. Only four “drops” have been released amassing a total volume of $148,000, the first of which is a 5,000-strong “stamp” titled Holiday Cheer Edition 1 Stamp.
The owners of the collection initially received the NFTs for free and, despite the low trading volume, now ask for around $2,000 for one token on Nifty Gateway.
The collection on its own makes up $117,000, or around 80% of the total collections sales volume.
Related: What are the applications of NFTs in supply chains?
Being the first drop, the NFT could be seen as more special to certain collectors. Starbucks has also said rewards on its NFTs will range from NFT holder-only merch, invites to exclusive events and maybe a trip to a Costa Rican coffee farm.
Meanwhile, the other drops are seeing much lower floor prices, with another 5,000-strong drop going as low as $100, while a 30,000-strong drop is nearly half that at just $59.
KnownOrigin, the NFT marketplace from eBay, is launching no-code required creator smart contracts so artists can split earnings and earn royalties as co-creators on collections. A beta release has been tested for the last few weeks with 84 contracts deployed and 250 editions of NFTs minted.
The Web3-friendly Neal Mohan was appointed as the new chief of YouTube, his previous tentative plans for the platform included the potential for creators to tokenize videos, photos, art and experiences to bring them additional revenue streams.
The majority of the funds stolen were from a single wallet which had $751,321.80 USDC drained from the malicious link.
Azuki, a popular nonfungible token (NFT) project, had its Twitter account compromised on Jan. 27 leading to hackers stealing over $750,000 worth of USD Coin (USDC) by posting a malicious “wallet drainer link” posed as a virtual land mint.
Hackers stole $751,321.80 USDC from a single wallet within half an hour of the malicious links being tweeted, according to Etherscan data provided to Cointelegraph by crypto wallet security firm Wallet Guard.
The data also revealed that hackers stole a further $6,752.62 worth of USDC from various wallets holding 11 NFTs and over 3.9 Ether (ETH).
Wallet Guard stated that the total amount stolen was $758,074.42.
Emily Rose, community manager for the anime-inspired NFT project confirmed via Twitter on Jan. 27 that the Azuki account was hacked, warning users not to click any links from Azuki’s Twitter account.
AZUKI OFFICIAL TWITTER ACCOUNT IS HACKED.
— Rose | | ⛩️NGL (@emilyrosemcg) January 27, 2023
DO NOT CLICK LINKS FROM OUR ACCOUNT.
PLEASE RETWEET.
Azuki’s head of community and product manager Dem explained on a Twitter Space hosted by Wallet Guard on Jan. 27 that scammers were able to “post a wallet drainer link,” after gaining control of Azuki's Twitter account.
Dem urged users to “stay safe and stay suspicious” while the team attempted to regain control of the account.
Several hours later Azuki stated that it had regained control of its Twitter account via a tweet:
1/ The @AzukiOfficial Twitter was compromised today. A series of malicious tweets were posted during the morning of Friday, Jan 27th (Pacific Time).
— Azuki (@AzukiOfficial) January 27, 2023
The team has regained control of the @AzukiOfficial Twitter.
Details below
This was confirmed by Rose and Dem retweeting the announcement.
Liz Yang, head of growth at Chiru Labs, the company behind Azuki, told Cointelegraph that the team is “currently in contact with Twitter and investigating the breach,” noting that Azuki “will provide an update once we have more information.”
Related: Hackers take over CoinDCX Twitter account, promote fake XRP ads
Ohm Shah, co-founder of Wallet Guard, told Cointelegraph that “it does not matter” if an account is official or verified, users should treat everything as suspicious until proven otherwise. Shah noted:
“Don’t be the first person that clicks the link. It’s better to be paranoid in Web3 than not.”
Upon Azuki regaining control of the account, it emphasised to its followers in a tweet to always “go out on several channels” to confirm announcements.
It also noted to reach out to the Azuki "mod team" on Discord when in doubt.
This news comes after stock trading platform Robinhood’s Twitter account was compromised on Jan. 25.
The hackers pushed Robinhood’s followers to each pay $0.0005 for a token called “RBH” on the BNB Smart Chain.
Conor Grogan, the head of product business operations at Coinbase, tweeted that at least 10 people had purchased approximately $1,000 worth of the scam token before the tweet was removed.