NEW: Twitter begins rolling out access to NFT profile pictures by mpmcsweeney
According to today's announcements, Twitter's profile picture feature is being powered by the API of NFT marketplace OpenSea. Supported wallets are Coinbase Wallet, MetaMask, Rainbow, Argent, Trust and Ledger Live.
Twitter stressed that it will never seek funds from or access to a user's wallet, cautioning about potential scammers who may attempt to do so."Right now subscribers can only set an NFT as their profile picture from the Twitter for iOS app, but the hexa-shaped profile picture is seen across all platforms," said Twitter.last September
France Dernières Nouvelles, France Actualités
Similar News:Vous pouvez également lire des articles d'actualité similaires à celui-ci que nous avons collectés auprès d'autres sources d'information.
Twitter Launches NFT Profile Picture VerificationNEW: After months of anticipation, Twitter has released an official verification mechanism for NFT profile pictures. lil_smush reports
Lire la suite »
Invictus NFT Lab Blazes Trail for a New Fine Art Paradigm – Sponsored Bitcoin NewsIn our view, blockchain technology and non-fungible tokens (NFTs) present a perfect tool to revolutionize the traditional Fine Art industry, to the
Lire la suite »
Moviegoers Will Inspire New Growth in the NFT Collectibles Market | HackerNoonNFTs provide access to a strong community where members share the same vision and long-term approach towards NFTs. This is one main reason why NFTs caught fire so quickly.
Lire la suite »
Solana NFT total sales volume crosses $1 billionSolana-based NFTs gained traction as Ethereum experienced all-time high gas fees last year — and some even fetched millions.
Lire la suite »
Tom Brady's NFT platform Autograph raises $170M to scale operationsAutograph said Andreessen Horowitz and VC firm Kleiner Perkin co-led the $170-million Series B round with contributions from others.
Lire la suite »
The Balance Between Art and IP Theft in NFT Culture'As Web 2 transitions into a decentralized Web 3, it is bringing tremendous opportunities for many builders and creators. But as both the music industry and YouTube have taught us, you can only go so far on stolen IP.' Opinion SamEwen
Lire la suite »