Commentary

Here’s the reality of what blockchains and NFTs can’t do for punters pondering metaverse property

'Ownership' in the metaverse is not the same as ownership in the physical world, which puts consumers at risk of being swindled.

In 2021, an investment firm bought 2,000 acres of real estate for about $4m. Normally this would not make headlines, but in this case the land was virtual. It existed only in a metaverse platform called The Sandbox. By buying 792 nonfungible tokens on the Ethereum blockchain, the firm then owned the equivalent of 1,200 city blocks.

But did it? It turns out that legal ownership in the metaverse is not that simple.

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