Hundreds of NFTs listed on OpenSea from Shanghai residents during COVID lockdown

The city of Shanghai has been in a month-long mandated quarantine, which confines its 25 million residents to their homes. Initially, the latest COVID-19 outbreak began in March of this year and developed into the worst infection zone since the beginning of the pandemic. 

As the virus infected hundreds of thousands of people, the extremely restrictive lockdown prevented residents from leaving their homes for weeks on end. In addition to the spike in infections, the lockdown prevented people from obtaining food and medical treatment, and introduced other austerities.

This led to frustrated citizens taking to the internet for solidarity and venting. However, government authorities have been reportedly censoring videos that surfaced on the internet showing scenes of confinement within Shanghai.

As information stored on the blockchain is immutable, many have turned to nonfungible token (NFT) minting in acts of combating and preserving these experiences.

NFT utility continues to grow

On April 22, a video called Voices of April was published on YouTube with voiceovers of experiences from Shanghai residents during the lockdown. Shortly after it was published on YouTube, it was minted into an NFT and listed on OpenSea.

According to a comment to Reuters from a Shanghai-based programer, the preservation of the video, which authorities tried to erase, is part of a “people’s rebellion.”

As of Wednesday, over 2,300 items related to the video can be found on the OpenSea marketplace. Moreover, hundreds of NFTs related to the lockdown in Shanghai have since appeared. This includes additional voiceover videos claiming to be from inside isolation camps and digital artwork depicting life under the lockdown.

Another Shanghai-based Twitter user tweeted his NFT creation of a screenshot of the Shanghai COVID map from late April.

This instance out of Shanghai reveals yet another use case and utility for NFT creation – namely, the preservation of digital artifacts against censorship.

Related: The NFT sector is projected to move around $800 billion over next 2 years: Report

China and crypto

The Chinese government has taken a hardened stance against digital assets, going as far as banning their trading domestically and forcing Bitcoin (BTC) miners to shut down their operations.

Though the country banned the usage of outside cryptocurrencies, it still sees the underlying technology as useful. The central bank digital currency (CBDC) of the government, the e-yuan, is currently in real-world trials throughout the country. In three cities, residents can use the e-yuan for tax payments. Meanwhile, it has been reported that the Chinese government may utilize blockchain and Web3 technologies for centralized development.

All Dutch and English crypto news!

Bitcoin fees top Ethereum for 3 days in a row as halving approaches

Transaction fees will play an important role in keeping Bitcoin miners afloat after the halving as the subsidy for mining a block is set to...

China and the crypto ETFs, Thai NFT music fest, KuCoin’s 1.3M new bots: Asia Express

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industry’s most important developments. Hong Kong’s new Bitcoin and Ether ETFs Hong Kong’s Securities & Futures Commission...

Is Bitcoin’s negative futures funding rate a sign of an upcoming BTC price crash?

Bitcoin bears celebrate as demand for leveraged long positions hits a six-month low, but crypto traders on X think it's time to go long. Market Analysis Own...

OneCoin lawyer gets bail pending appeal for conviction and 10-year sentence

Judge Edgardo Ramos determined that Mark Scott was not “likely to flee or pose a danger to the safety of any other person or the...

Beste exchanges

Koop je crypto bij Bitvavo