Postaus

➥ Owning a Day > Owning an NFT
I used to think a day was just something you go through and forget. Nothing really sticks.
Then I came across @yr365art.
At first, it looked like another NFT collection. But the more I read, the more it felt different. Each piece is tied to a real day in history. And owning one doesn’t feel like collecting it feels like choosing what you want to remember.
→ 1/ Take October 31, 2008.
The Bitcoin whitepaper dropped quietly. No hype, no audience. Just an idea. But looking back, that was the moment everything started to shift—how we think about money, trust, systems.
→2/ Or January 27, 1945
Auschwitz was liberated. That’s not just a date. It’s something you shouldn’t scroll past and forget.
→ 3/ Or January 1, 1863
The Emancipation Proclamation. A turning point, but also a reminder that some stories don’t end in one day.
That’s when it clicked for me: this isn’t really about NFTs. It’s about memory.
Right now, only around 15% of days are claimed. Most of history is still just sitting there, waiting for someone to care.
=>> If I had to choose, I’d still go with October 31, 2008. Because it proved one thing ideas don’t need permission to change the world.
A lot of people collect NFTs to own something.
This feels more like choosing what I refuse to forget.
The story’s still being written. I’m just choosing where I stand.
@yr365art #365Art #EverydayHasALegacy

Vastuuvapauslauseke: OKX Orbit -sisältö on tarkoitettu ainoastaan tiedotustarkoituksiin. Lisätietoja
Vastaukset
Ei vielä kommentteja. Ole ensimmäinen vastaaja!
