What Are NFTs?
NFTs are unique blockchain tokens. They can represent digital collectibles, memberships, game items, tickets, or records, but ownership of a token is not automatically ownership of every related right.
NFTs and Tokenization
Category
Non-fungible tokens, metadata, ownership records, creator royalties, and user risks.
Content hub
Cryptocurrency Basics Hub
Learning path
Crypto Basics
Primary intent
NFT concept search
NFTs are unique blockchain tokens. They can represent digital collectibles, memberships, game items, tickets, or records, but ownership of a token is not automatically ownership of every related right.
NFTs and Tokenization
NFT metadata describes the media, name, traits, and related information shown by wallets and marketplaces. The token and its metadata are connected but not always stored in the same place.
NFT Basics
NFT marketplaces make discovery and trading easier, but they also create risks around fake collections, wallet prompts, misleading volume, and unclear rights.
NFT Safety
NFT royalties are intended to pay creators on secondary sales, but enforcement depends on marketplace rules, contract design, and ecosystem support.
NFT Basics
NFT storage describes where metadata and media files live. IPFS can make content addressing more durable, but files still need availability and maintenance.
NFT Basics
NFT scams often use fake collections, imitation marketplaces, social impersonation, and wallet approval traps. Verification matters before clicking, minting, listing, or signing.
NFT Safety
Soulbound tokens are usually described as non-transferable tokens tied to identity, credentials, memberships, or reputation. The concept is experimental and raises privacy and governance questions.
NFT Basics