2min chapter

Two Bored Apes - NFT Podcast cover image

Episode 63 - Uniswap In NFTs, OS New Royalties Policy, Stripe Fiat-To-Crypto

Two Bored Apes - NFT Podcast

CHAPTER

Is There a Funding Mechanism for So Many Profile Picture Clubs?

It just gets, yeah, it's so tricky when, let's say 90% of people trading the collection are not paying royalties. Like that's a very easy thing for almost every human on earth to justify if they want to, you know? Yeah. That's sort of the nature of being like an individual or whatever in selfishness. It was open C2 and a half. I think looks was two, and they gave it back to the community. And then X2, Y2 was maybe less, and then Sudu was 0.5 and then Blur is 0.4. But it's far from done. So it'll kind of be interesting to see, here

00:00
Speaker 2
Hello and welcome to the latest Science Insights from New Scientist. I'm Rowan Hooper, joined today by Penny Sarchet, as always.
Speaker 3
Hello, how are you?
Speaker 2
Well, I'm good, except I'm sort of wishing I was in Svalbard. You've
Speaker 3
got that itch of you. It's a yearly thing for me now. Yeah, because you did go last year, didn't you? Svalbard
Speaker 2
in the high Arctic. And the reason I'm bringing it up rather awkwardly at the beginning is that New Scientist are going again this year in June. We've got the whole ship. We've chartered the whole ship. It's this really lovely expedition vessel. It goes through the sea ice. Richard Dawkins is coming. And there are just 14 cabins left on this cruise. Wow,
Speaker 3
that sounds really amazing.
Speaker 2
It was amazing. Polar bears, walruses were my favourite animal. Saw them up close. Amazing. So anyone interested, go to newscientist.com/tours and you'll see the Arctic trip.
Speaker 3
Okay, on with the show. We've been reporting on some really interesting stories this week. Coming up, we're going to discuss the phenomenon of climate whiplash, what it is and its role in the LA wildfires and how we're seeing it more and more. And we're also going way back to the 1960s and hearing from the world's first chatbot. Let's
Speaker 2
start, though, with a paper out this week in Nature. It's a really nice example of what modern archaeology does. In other words, it's genetic archaeology. And it shows that in the Iron Age, Celtic tribes revolved around women.
Speaker 3
Yes, this is so interesting. So this comes from a study from excavations of the remains of the Juro Trigas tribe at Winterbourne Kingston in Dorset. It's an Iron Age burial site, basically just a 2000 year old cemetery, essentially. And so then genetic analysis of the remains there suggests that in this society, married women stayed in their ancestral homes, while it was husbands, it was the men who sort of moved in from other communities and that this practice lasted centuries.
Speaker 2
Yeah.

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