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Web3 could revolutionize the relationship between brands and their customers. Here’s an introduction to what marketers need to know.

When the internet first went live, publishers would create content and users would consume it – a period known as web1. A decade or so later, web2 took over with the emergence of web apps and social networks, which made it easy for everyone to create, share and engage with content.

Fast forward to today, and the novelty of web2 has largely worn off. Some of the most impactful web2 companies – such as Meta (Facebook), Google and Apple – have made a killing by leveraging user-generated content (UGC) to engage consumers and create unique profiles for each of them, only to turn around and ultimately sell that data to third parties for advertising purposes.

The worst part? The vast majority of those users had no idea this was taking place – and none of them gave their permission to allow it to happen.

If advertisers want to rebuild trust with consumers, they need to take an open, transparent approach and ask their audiences for their permission to collect data. And this is exactly what the web3 opportunity – a new era of the internet characterized by decentralization, transparency and autonomy – enables.

What are the core principles of web3?

Ask 10 people to define web3, and you might get 10 different answers. But at a high level, web3 is a new iteration of the internet powered by blockchain technology and token-based economics, and it’s also governed by three central tenets:

  • Decentralization. In web2, companies own platforms. In web3, platforms are decentralized. No organization has control over any content; users do
  • Transparency. Thanks to blockchain technology, all users on peer-to-peer networks and decentralized apps (dApps) will share open, unalterable databases that they can verify with their own eyes
  • Autonomy. Ultimately, users will be able to control their own digital destiny and have the final say in whether their data is collected and how it’s used

According to a recent study, 96% of consumers don’t trust advertisers. This is exactly why brands should be incredibly excited about the web3 moment.

With the right approach, digital advertisers can rebuild the trust they’ve lost during the web2 era – connecting with consumers on a meaningful level and in an open and honest way.

Web3 is here – it’s time to prepare for the tectonic shift

Though we’re still early, the web3 moment has already arrived. Unfortunately, advertisers that wait to adapt to this reality will learn the lesson the hard way.

In the not-too-distant future, users will demand a cut of the revenue generated from the data they create. As an internet-native currency that is incredibly divisible, crypto is the easiest mechanism to deliver incentives that users can immediately put to use.

As the world gravitates toward the web3 standard, user data will increasingly be held on the blockchain or in decentralized storage solutions, which will give users more power over their data than ever before. As a result, they will be able to choose exactly which brands they consent to share data with, what data they wish to share, and for how long.

Advertisers that don’t prepare for this tectonic shift and adapt their methods to offer a real value proposition in exchange for interacting with user data will be left behind.

By offering tokenized rewards – whether that’s fungible crypto coins or non-fungible tokens (NFTs), an on-trend, blockchain-based, one-of-a-kind digital asset – advertisers can tap into the web3 ethos while exciting users about what they have to offer. Plus, they get to take advantage of the magnificent properties that come with blockchain technology, such as:

  • Immutability, or the permanent, unalterable nature of a blockchain ledger
  • Validation, or the way in which users can verify transactions are legitimate
  • Disintermediation, or the absence of intermediaries between advertisers and users
  • Profound security, made possible by cryptography and decentralization
  • Ease of transfer, which makes it simple and quick to send and receive tokens

How crypto can help advertisers thrive in web3

One of the easiest ways to reward users when they give their permission to share their personal data or perform specific actions is by issuing crypto rewards. For example, you can give them rewards when they watch videos, view personalized ads and opt to receive content from brands.

By offering an opt-in value exchange – where they’re willing to part with their data or their attention for tokens – advertisers can begin building long-lasting customer relationships and regain trust while ensuring regulatory compliance.

Though cryptocurrency remains in its infancy, adoption continues to increase; today, some 27 million Americans own crypto. With steady growth over the last decade, it’s only a matter of time before crypto usage reaches critical mass. The sooner advertisers embrace the inevitably of crypto, the faster they’ll be in a position to capitalize.

Since the future of digital advertising will be fuelled by permission and digital rewards, brands need to start looking for a purpose-built crypto-rewarded advertising platform that will guide the journey ahead. Strategies that enable aligned incentives – where all participants, including users, advertisers and the platform, benefit from the permissioned sharing of data – will lead to victory in the web3 era.

With the right approach, the lopsided relationship between brands and consumers suddenly evens out, and both parties engaging with each other is more of a partnership than anything else.

Feature Image Credit: Adobe Stock

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Lauren Griewski is chief revenue officer at Permission.io.

Sourced from The Drum

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Columnist Samuel Scott wanted to understand the true value of NFTs for marketers. So how better to get to the bottom of the craze than to go out and buy one of his own? Here’s what dabbling in Boris Johnson caricatures and Ethereum trading taught him about marketing’s latest trend.

To riff off a famous Rory Sutherland quote, NFTs are just JPGs and GIFs with advertising budgets.

This month, actress Reese Witherspoon formed a partnership with the World of Women ‘non-fungible token’ collective. Universal Music said it will create ‘collectible NFTs’ with the Curio platform. GameStop announced a future NFT marketplace.

In their coverage of such NFT news, the major media often describe them as ‘a unique token on the blockchain’ or ‘a digital asset that represents real-world objects.’ But those vague terms are meaningless.

NFTs are actually just ways to get more people to use cryptocurrency and thereby increase the artificial money’s value. But people can still learn how certain marketing trends have helped to hype this newest business bandwagon. Hopefully they will then use the ideas for something that actually has value and is not destroying the planet.

In this column, I will go through my attempted step-by-step process of buying an NFT – one that features everyone’s favourite prime minister – to show first what they are and then what we can take from one of the biggest crazes since tulips in 1630s Holland.

But beforehand, I have two requests. First, ignore the NFT propaganda, and focus on what you see. Second, disregard the shills who jump on every bandwagon as ‘The future!’ and consider only the facts. (After all, is anyone still using Segways or Clubhouse?) Now, let’s begin.

How to buy an NFT

There are already many places online to sell one’s digital artwork and graphic designs. Creative Market. Etsy. Big Cartel. And more. What makes, say, Mintable’s NFTs (on the left) different from Art Web’s items (on the right)?

Last week, I browsed Mintable – another NFT e-commerce website – to see. And I saw this.

Mintable had my curiosity, but now they had my attention. To place a bid, I had to create an account. No big deal. But then I also had to connect an Ethereum (ETH) cryptocurrency wallet through a company called MetaMask.

Not wanting to spend too much, I bought $20 of funds – or 0.00662957 ETH. After the fees, I paid almost $32 to have $20 worth of ETH. My first concern? That was a 60% markup. (Mintable lets people pay with credit cards in USD, but the amount is still converted to ETH – with assumed additional currency exchange fees.)

So, I placed a bid of 0.006 ETH. Long story short, I lost the auction. Within just a few hours, the price had skyrocketed to 2 ETH ($5,600). My second concern: who would pay that much – the UK Labour Party?

But I still wanted to see a purchase all the way through. So I bid my $20 again on this random ‘UndeadSkelly’ graphic. And I won – no one else had bided against me.

What exactly did I win? Take a look at this other information on the NFT’s listing page.

What did I purchase? A legally enforceable copyright to the image? The sole commercial right to use the media? No.

My third concern: look at the code on the right above. That is the NFT’s metadata, which contains information such as a link that shows where the image is stored on some server somewhere. The metadata is basically a certificate of ownership. Essentially, I had just bought a piece of paper.

Here is what Mintable’s own website states: “When you buy an NFT, what you are really buying is a smart contract (your certificate of ownership) that points to a set of metadata which among other things, includes a link to your NFT file.”

“The only thing secured by the blockchain is the smart contract – your certificate of ownership,” Mintable continues. “This is why there is so much insecurity hindering the widespread adoption of NFTs – without the actual asset being stored on the blockchain, there is no guarantee that the NFT you buy today won’t just end up becoming a broken link to a non-existent file in 5 years if/when the server(s) it is hosted on shits itself.”

Buying an NFT is not buying some type of digital media itself at all. It is purchasing a receipt that shows a link to where something is stored online. And nothing prevents anyone from right-clicking ‘Save As’ and keeping copies of the media for themselves. My fourth concern: the NFTs listed for sale do not even have watermarks.

Remember two things. Real value usually comes from scarcity, and anyone who controls a server where a file is stored can control what file is stored there.

But wait – there’s more. What happened when I went to finalize the UndeadSkelly NFT purchase? For the right to purchase the metadata, I had to pay not only the $32 for $20 worth of ETH cryptocurrency but also $23 in ‘gas fees’ (a carbon offset fee for the energy consumed in blockchain transactions). My fifth concern.

The bottom line? I would have had to buy more ETH cryptocurrency and pay at least $55 to purchase a $20 graphic that countless other people probably already had. That would be a 175% total markup. I thought to hell with this and never confirmed the transaction. (I also deleted my browser history, removed the MetaMask Chrome add-on, poured garlic powder on my computer and threw clumps of salt over my shoulders.)

Of course, most online retailers have added transaction or shipping fees of one sort or another. But I just did not see the added value of this entire process and paying with a sketchy ‘currency’ for an image that I may or may not ‘own’.

For review for a column last month on B2B advertising and content marketing, the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute in Australia gave me the e-book update to How Brands Grow Part 2. Do I now “own” it? Yes.

It sits on my hard drive and in my private Apple iCloud account. I have full agency over that specific digital media item and can do whatever I want with it. No one else has any control over it. Here is a helpful piece of advice: you do not ‘own’ anything digital that is not downloaded and stored on a computer, mobile device, or server that you own or otherwise control.

Buying a copy of an e-book that many others also have is one thing. The story or information itself is valuable. A copy of a random Boris Johnson or UndeadSkelly image is not. Besides, the artistry of most NFTs looks like something I would see in the 1990s video game series Doom. My sixth concern.

So, my original question:wWhat makes Mintable’s ‘NFTs’ different from Art Web’s graphics? That answers lie in the two major marketing trends that people should take away from this whole insanity.

What marketing trends increased NFT’s popularity

Tech vendor lock-in. Take Curio and Mintable. If their goal is simply to facilitate the sale of digital media and take a cut, then why do they specifically push the use of cryptocurrency as the primary payment method? (When I started to create a Curio account, it also prompted me to connect to MetaMask.)

Follow the pseudo-money. Curio cofounder Ben Arnon holds positions in several cryptocurrencies and hypes the industry on social media. Mintable cofounder Zach Burks is a Twitter self-described “crypto nerd” and “NFT lover.”

By pushing users into buying and using cryptocurrency, the companies increase the values of those cryptocurrencies – as well as the values of any personal holdings. After all, the global forex market is also a game of supply and demand – the currencies that are most in use generally have the greatest values. (The Russian ruble is not doing well at the moment.)

It goes far beyond mere NFTs. Take Bitcoin, the original cryptocurrency. According to Scott Galloway, the top 2% of the holders own 95% of the $800 billion supply. The more that crypto is hyped and used in general, the more that a few rich people will become even richer. (For more, I recommend watching ‘Line Goes Up – The Problem With NFTs’ by Dan Olson’s Folding Ideas on YouTube.)

Still, there are other examples of vendor lock-in (though the practice is sometimes uncomfortably close to monopolistic behaviour). In the past, music purchased over Apple iTunes could be played only within iTunes or on an iPod. Some printer companies state that if ink cartridges not sold by them are used, then the warranty is void.

On one level, vendor lock-in can increase revenues. But on an entirely different level, vendor lock-in can create the feeling of being part of an exclusive community who are using the ‘widget’. As in crypto.

Generational sentiment. I often criticize the lazy use of demographic groups as market segments. But the fact remains that all people born at the same time do experience the same general political and economic events and upheavals.

And if NFTs and the entire crypto world have done one thing well, it is capturing the zeitgeist of younger people. Every enthusiast I know personally is under the age of 35. Take Julie Fredrickson, a tech company founder turned investor who attended a cryptocurrency convention this month and described it in her blog.

“It’s full jubilee at the end of the world shit,” she wrote. “You are surrounded by millennials and gen-zers who know in their gut that their future has been stolen from them. And instead of being pissed they decided to build. And they decided to gamble. And it’s not clear which one is which sometimes.

“Everyone is soaking in student debt and working shitty interchangeable jobs for corporations owned by private equity. No one can afford a house. No one is stable enough for a marriage and children … but if you are in crypto the future looks pretty rosy. You are discussing real estate for your second home and the tax advantages of different jurisdictions.”

The possible future of NFTs

While I am loathe to make marketing predictions and instead choose to critique them, I will make an exception. The very economics of cryptocurrencies mean that their values must collapse one day.

Bitcoin has a limit of 21 million coins, and more than 80% have already been created. What does that mean? Soon, the only way for the price to increase will be to rely on the Greater Fool Theory in market bubbles – that there will always be someone who will buy your widget for more than what you paid.

There is always a point where someone is left holding the bag. Rinse and repeat for many, if not all, cryptocurrencies. And that is only one of all the problems. (I’d also read Why the NFT Market Will Collapse at Project Syndicate.)

Recently, more than $200m worth of NFTs have been stolen from the OpenSea marketplace through an email phishing hack. Many NFT sales have been creators buying their own work to increase the prices. Salesforce employees are rebelling after the company said it will launch an NFT cloud.

Cent, another NFT platform, stopped selling them because of counterfeits. (My comment: they are not “counterfeit” – they are likely 100% entirely accurate copies of things that are freely available.) A colleague at The Drum, media editor John McCarthy, posted a Twitter thread of articles on the use of NFTs in money laundering.

And I have one question for Matt Damon: for that Crypto.com advertisement, did you get paid in cash or cryptocurrency? I would love to know.

Yes, I am a little skeptical. Last year, an Israeli PR agency here asked me for a meeting to discuss some potential consulting work. As it turned out, they were pivoting to the cryptocurrency space and were gaining some big clients who wanted publicity.

One question they asked: “So, which cryptocurrencies do you own?” I almost bit off part of my tongue while trying not to laugh. In what was probably not a surprise, they went with another consultant.

And what will I do with the 0.006 ETH that I still have after this experiment? Maybe I will make a sketchy donation to Boris Johnson’s Tories. It seems to be another fashionable thing to do these days.

Feature Image Credit: Adobe Stock

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The Promotion Fix is a​n ​exclusive biweekly column for The Drum from Samuel Scott, a global keynote marketing speaker who is a former journalist, newspaper editor, and director of marketing and communications in the high-tech industry. Follow him @samueljscott.

Sourced from The Drum

The Promotion Fix is an exclusive column for The Drum contributed by global keynote and virtual marketing speaker Samuel Scott, a former journalist, newspaper editor and director of marketing in the high-tech industry. He is based out of Tel Aviv, Israel.

By Camomile Shumba

  • Anatoly Yakovenko, who co-founded Solana, says NFTs are essentially self-monetizing social networks.
  • Yakovenko said NFT communities did not rely on “poison marketplaces” to make money.
  • Experts have said NFT communities grow thanks in large part to word of mouth.

Non-fungible tokens might be all the rage right now, but they’re in fact the early foundations of the social networks of the future, according to Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko.

NFTs are often sold as part of a collection, or come as part of a play-to-earn gaming platform, linking up owners all over the world. The sense of community is built in from the get-go and requires no external involvement.

“I think these are the early starts of true web social networks that do not rely on ads for monetization that don’t rely on Google or Facebook to function,” Yakovenko told Insider in a recent interview.

“They are purely these digital communities that can monetize/self monetize from their own content without the need of any of these external poison marketplaces,” he said. Yakovenko is a long-time critic of some of the advertising and data-privacy strategies of larger social platforms such as Facebook or Google.

Hype around the metaverse, a virtual reality where people can buy land, homes, luxury items that they pay for in cryptocurrency, helped make NFTs November’s best performing digital assets.

In the past week alone, a whopping $275.5 million worth of NFTs have been sold, according to Non Fungible data, thanks in part to rockstars’ avatars hanging out in the likes of Decentraland or the Sandbox with those of ordinary people, as well as digital art sales from the Bored Ape Yacht Club and CryptoPunks NFT collections. Community-based NFTs often bring perks to their members too.

The solana blockchain is a smaller rival to the ethereum network. It too can host decentralized finance applications, like smart contracts, as well as run NFTs, which are unique digital tokens that represent a real-world piece of content, such as artwork, music or video. Unlike cryptocurrencies, they can’t be exchanged like for like, making them a kind of digital collector’s item.

Chainalysis, a blockchain analytics platform, says the success of NFTs is a result of “community and word of mouth growth”.

They certainly appeal to communities such as celebrity fan bases. K-pop idol band BTS, pop star Katy Perry, along with fashion houses Burberry and Louis Vuitton are just some of the names that have dived into the NFT space. TikTok, a video-sharing social media platform, launched its own NFT collection in October. Snoop Dog even has his own metaverse called the Snoopverse and a fan coughed up $450,000 for a plot of virtual land to be the rapper’s neighbour.

Even with all the glitz and glamour around NFTs, they’re mainly something ordinary people will own. 80% of all NFT transfers between January and October this year involved people that spent less than $10,000 per transaction.

“I am really excited to see an NFT community go from – 10,000 people to 100,000 and then a million and then 100 million – that’s unbelievable, right?” Yakovenko said.

“What does that look like when there’s 100 million people that are all in – the same community that is driven by this digital content?” he said.

Feature Image: Anatoly Yakovenko

Solana

By Camomile Shumba

Sourced from Markets Insider

By Rick Prelinger

Non-fungible tokens and artificial intelligence make tracing the origins of a digital object more fragile. What are the world’s archivists to do?

As an archivist, I’m excited about what disruptive innovations like non-fungible tokens (NFTs) and artificial intelligence may mean for archives. But I’m also worried. These developments pose existential threats to our field, and by extension, to the survival of human history and culture.

I give old films away for free. It started in 1999 when I was seduced by the promise, excitement, and just-felt-rightness of the gift economy. Not 30 seconds after we first met, Internet Archive founder Brewster Kahle asked me, “Want to put your film archives online for free?” Braving the new world of video digitizing and sputtery streaming changed my life. Our archival footage enabled thousands, maybe millions of artists, video makers, educators, and even post-Communist Polish village kids to remix history and bring the past into the present. I never knew how many people were using our material or who they were—but wasn’t that the point?

In 1999 the future of our archives was to be consumed, to enrich public memory with new evidence without hassle. I wanted our archives to be as ubiquitous as infrastructure, to work their way into every corner of the net, to propagate everywhere without need for attribution or credit. I wanted our archives to vanish in the web.

I still do.

But now the survival of archives as we know them is uncertain. Whether we know it or not, we all rely on a patchwork of chronically underfunded public and private institutions that hold the world’s histories and cultural heritages in trust for all of us and make them accessible. Every time we see an old photo, hear a historical recording, see a news clip, or find a family history document, it likely originated in an archive. While we see and touch massive digital archives online, most archives are still largely undigitized collections of physical media like film, video, music, photographs, and paper documents. By design, archives are deliberate and thoughtful, with a timeline designed to preserve culture “forever.” They’re not built to nimbly weather disruption.

It was only a matter of time before the market figured out a way to manufacture and sell digital scarcity, and the marketplace for cultural objects has moved well past the archival ecosystem. Artists, gamers, entertainers, athletes, and executives now sell NFTs, tokenized digital objects whose authenticity is said to be assured by the reverse traceability of blockchain transactions. The combination of Covid-19 isolation and cryptocurrency profits created a powerful incentive for digital-positive collectors to compete for these NFTs, and some creators are raking in Ethereum.

Law professor Tonya M. Evans optimistically suggests that crypto art offers Black artists and communities opportunities to bypass white art gatekeepers and “capture and own the value of the culture that they produce.” While the current boom may well go the way of the 1920s Florida land-rush hype, NFTs are the first step in what’s likely to be a robust market for unique or scarce digital objects. Many of these digital objects won’t be born-digital; instead they’ll be one-off digitized copies of physical materials, for which there could be a huge market. Who wouldn’t want to own the master digital copy of their favourite author’s journal, a photograph of Abraham Lincoln or Frederick Douglass, or the recently rediscovered newsreel of the 1919 Black Sox scandal?

Nothing could be a greater cultural and ethical shock to archives than NFTs. Prevailing archival ethics generally dictate that all users are treated equally, and that archival materials aren’t exposed or sold only to high bidders. And once archives select materials for retention, they consider themselves in most cases ethically bound to do so permanently.

If an archive has a merch business, it’s tiny: keychains and postcards. As poor a fit with archival DNA as tokenizing archive collections as NFTs may be, the possibility of leveraging digital scarcity by selling NFTs while retaining physical materials is a hefty temptation. The archival world is a world of inadequate budgets and financial constraint, filled with underpaid workers and massive, poorly resourced projects like digital preservation, and the challenging task of digitizing analog materials. Will archives be tempted by the potential upside of NFTs and tokenize digital representations of their crown jewels (or the rights to these assets)? This would worsen an already bad situation, where institutions like our Library of Congress hold physical copies of millions of films, TV programs, and recordings that can’t be touched because someone else holds the copyright. Ideally, archives and museums should own and control both the physical and digital states of its collections. That won’t happen if they have to sell or license NFTs in order to survive. And there’s another risk: Minting NFTs requires a lot of energy (though we may hope for a cleaner process), and the future security of archives is threatened by climate change. Researchers have discovered that almost all archives will be affected by risk factors like sea level rise, increased temperature, or heavy rainfall.

For those working with the raw materials of history, integrity and authenticity are the chief necessities. How do NFTs address these? While the blockchain is supposed to draw an unbroken link between creator/tokenizer and purchaser, it’s just a record of transactions that might be tainted or even bogus. We know the original Mona Lisa resides in the Louvre, but it’s very hard to identify who really created and who owns many of the millions of creative works made in the analog era. It’s nearly impossible to track who owns the even greater number of digital works made every year. So while the blockchain can help us follow sales and transfers of digital objects, how do we know the original representations made about these objects can be trusted? Already there are many NFTs on offer that are nothing more than tokenized versions of works belonging to third parties, often scraped from museum websites. This isn’t a new problem—after we put digitized films from our archives online for free, many other stock footage companies downloaded them and sold them as their own. Who will be the arbiter of which copies are closest to the original? The quagmire recalls Philip K. Dick’s The Man in the High Castle, where American craftspeople build near-perfect counterfeits of American cultural collectibles. Authenticity is based on aura, aura on belief. If many Alices sell tokenized, pirated copies of the Zapruder film to many Bobs, this bombs the blockchain with many transactions that obfuscate the fact that these might be pirated versions. The solution, obviously, is to know your source—to authenticate objects and their provenance by authenticating their owners. But can that scale in a marketplace where transactions might number in the billions?

Registries are emerging to authenticate sources and provenance, and perhaps even indemnify purchasers against false representations by sellers. These have long existed in the collectibles business. Rare coins are frequently processed by trusted grading and authentication services, which charge to inspect coins and then encapsulate them in sealed plastic slabs. While I can see this happening for the four existing colour versions of Edvard Munch’s The Scream, how would it work for millions of new digital works? Will these registries be proprietary or open, and how much will their services cost? And authentication systems ultimately rest on the accuracy of information they receive. Who would arbitrate conflicting claims between potentially millions of squatting bots feuding over provenance and authenticity issues? And could such registries be flooded with blockchain-authenticated look-alikes and deepfakes? If you think this is improbable, just look at YouTube, where Content ID, its suite of pattern-matching algorithms that’s claimed 800 million videos since its launch, supposedly enforces the rights of copyright owners by flagging unauthorized uploads. The system generates huge numbers of false positives and won’t authorize legitimate fair uses of content. And copyright to millions of videos (including many public domain works) is claimed by squatters. Fuzziness and a high error rate may be OK for a commercial service like YouTube. But it’s a disaster for cultural and historical institutions that derive income from reuse. How would a blockchain full of false transactions complicate ownership and authenticity?

One working solution is for cultural and historical institutions like archives to run their own trusted registries of digital objects. But this is expensive, and it creates further incentives for archives to monetize their holdings and become less accessible to non-commercial users, like genealogists, the group that uses archives more than anyone else. If the need to administer NFTs makes NFTs inevitable, that’s a loss. Today’s archivists are faced with the need to come to terms with NFTs without having the resources to ensure their needs are met.

NFTs make archival authenticity, and thus history, more fragile. And right now authenticity is threatened by AI.

If you’ve seen Denis Shirayev’s upscaled historical videos, you’ve seen the past enhanced by a touch of the future. He takes videos scanned from very old films, like our poignant A Trip Down Market Street Before the Fire, shot just days before the 1906 quake and fire that devastated San Francisco, upscales them to 4K, smoothes out jitter and adds colour. (Today any video editor can make something almost as good using off-the-shelf tools like Topaz Video Enhance AI.) Shirayev’s videos are beautiful and compelling, but they show you something that never was. They’re not archival; they’re fiction. Artist and author Gwen C. Katz recently demonstrated the flaws of AI colorization, showing that software substitutes a drab colour palette for the brilliant colours of historical reality, and pointing out that only primary historical evidence unaffected by our preconceptions can present a plausible image of the past. Will prettified AI-enhanced digital objects made to draw in the eyeballs of distracted web surfers push the original, less attractive evidence out of view? Will people modify archival materials in such a way as to marginalize their original source? Will established archives sit by as others embellish their collections into prettier, more marketable objects? And, worst of all, will pretty images stand in for the inconvenient, hard-to-view authentic record?

The question of “real” vs. “pretty” recently exploded when a Vice article (now removed) revealed Matt Loughrey‘s colorization and alteration of mug shots taken in a Khmer Rouge torture center just before their subjects were murdered. Cambodian genocide survivors led a protest against Loughrey’s project, which added smiles to a few victims’ faces, and the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum and the Government of Cambodia called for his apology and for the photographs to be taken down. From the viewpoint of historical and archival authenticity, Loughrey’s call for infusing archival photos with a sense of contemporary realism was perhaps most disturbing. “The image that we’ve come to accept as standard is becoming obsolete owing to the advance in display technology,” he told the Daily Mail. “When we consider a museum or a library or a documentary, as these displays advance, which they are rapidly, the producers of these are going to be less inclined to display and use these images. They’re going to have to find new images by repurposing them.” The actual archival record, in other words, can no longer stand by itself.

Together these two developments pose an existential threat to archives. Archives won’t go under, but it’s going to take serious thinking, significant new funding, and public education to help these under-resourced, deliberate organizations respond to rapid change. The integrity and survival of these important institutions are in everyone’s interest. Archives aren’t perfect, but they can help keep us honest. They’re a force for historical accuracy and accountability, if we trust the records in their collections and know their provenance. All of us should hope the promise of NFTs and AI won’t slide us into a world of “fake archives” and speculation in archival collectibles.

I still want our film archives to be consumed freely by makers in familiar media and in media we haven’t yet begun to imagine. I still want our archives to vanish in the web. But I don’t want history and the institutions that painstakingly preserve it to disappear into an eternal and amnesic present.

Featured Image Credit: Sam Whitney; Getty Images

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Rick Prelinger is an archivist, filmmaker, writer, and educator whose collection of 60,000 films was acquired by the Library of Congress in 2002. He is currently chair and professor of film and digital media at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Sourced from WIRED