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When I show you what I'm holding, some of you might see a simple cartoon.
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Some of you might see a complex piece of engineering.
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You'd both be right.
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Meet Genesis, the first Cryptokitty.
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She's not alone.
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All of a sudden, cryptokitties are everywhere.
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“Cryptokitties”
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"Cryptokitties"
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“The viral blockchain-based game that sparked a global craze for virtual cats.”
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“It's a picture of a cat.
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And apparently someone bought one for $100,000!”
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You've probably heard of cryptocurrencies— but these are cryptocollectibles.
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They're like digital beanie babies or baseball cards.
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It sounds silly, but Cryptokitties is testing a profound idea: Can a digital good be…
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rare?
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Every 15 minutes, the company Axiom Zen releases a new cryptokitty that only one person can buy.
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And they'll do that until November 2018, when they're capping these “Generation Zero" kitties at 50,000.
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But there are already more cryptokitties than that, because unlike baseball cards, you can breed them.
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The game is that there are billions of different possible combinations of traits.
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And so you can decide which combination of traits is interesting to you
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and you can go out and try to find a cat that has that combination and buy it.
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Or you can try and find a combination that no one's created before.
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And through our breeding mechanics you can come up with new combinations of traits
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or, if you're lucky, even new traits entirely.
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That's Layne Lafrance and Dieter Shirley.
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They both helped found Cryptokitties in November 2017.
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And they've convinced a loyal group of users to spend more than $23 million buying and
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breeding these digital cats.
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In just a few months, a whole community of third party sites and services formed around cryptokitties.
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You can do youngest first, cheapest first.
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See, like $10 bucks.
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And as I mouse over, this is a plug-in I found.
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We are trying to find new ways to play with these Kitties outside of the main game.
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So we're starting with contests!
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Derpface is possibly one of my favorite kitties because he is just so unbelievably ugly.
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The traits that made Derpface the ugliest Cryptokitty
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—even though, I mean, I think he's adorable—
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are baked into his code.
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See, this is what Derpface and Genesis both really look like.
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The “genes” in their code define their physical appearance on 12 features,
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based on a template by a human designer.
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They call those features….
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Cattributes are the visual elements of the cat.
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Like us, these cats can also carry traits
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in their code that only show up in their offspring.
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But the genetic algorithm that drives cryptokitty reproduction — that's kept secret.
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When the cats are breeding together the secret sauce combines those elements to make with
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a certain amount of... well we can't really tell you much about that.
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But!
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They are combined.
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And people spend a lot of money on the chance to get their dream cat.
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Price depends on the generation number and on what traits are in high demand.
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In other words, popular Cryptokitties earn high prices the way collectibles always have:
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Scarcity.
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And what's so interesting about this is that digital scarcity is brand new.
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Before the computers came along if you had a thing, only you could have that thing and no one
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else have that thing unless you gave it to the other person in which case you would no longer have it.
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But that completely changes when goods become digital and accessible online.
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Every time you give somebody data on the internet it's a copy.
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I think the sort of reckoning
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we had in the 90s and early 2000s was how do we live in a world where everything can
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be copied infinitely and you know and what's going to happen to the music industry?
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What's going to happen to the news and entertainment industries? And we've seen it all play out.
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But Cryptokitties can be scarce because of the technology they're built on.
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They're using a blockchain.
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Specifically, the Ethereum blockchain, so you have to buy them with “ether”.
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But you might also be familiar with the original, Bitcoin.
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A blockchain provides a decentralized system for recording transactions, making fraud and piracy a lot harder.
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And so the essence of blockchain is that we have -- whether you want to call a book or people
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used to refer to it as a ledger.
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And they would say, “Hey, you know you know Bob has this, Alice has that.”
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And then everybody gets a copy of that book.
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And if someone comes along and says, "No Alice doesn't have that."
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People can point to their own copy of the book and they can say, "No no no you're wrong.
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I see right here in this in my copy that Alice has this."
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When a Kitty is born and it's beautiful and I love it, there's something very special about knowing that
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it belongs to me and no one else and no one can take it.
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But the truth is, it's not all yours.
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You own the code for that cat, but not the actual image.
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In the case of cryptokitties, they have sections in their terms of service that say that they own
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all of the images, all of the graphic elements and that they have the right to use them however they want.
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That you actually have no right to use them in any way.
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That's not so different from a baseball card.
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If you have, say, a Topps baseball card and it has the player's name on it -- say
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Barry Bonds, and a picture of Barry Bonds on it -- you own the physical object but you
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don't own the copyright.
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Owning the physical object doesn't give you the right to print up other cards but it does
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give you the right to trade your card to someone else or to sell it to a collector.
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But for Cryptokitties...
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If they decide they want to, say, change the artwork or if they sell the company to someone
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who wants to pull the artwork offline and use it only in their new Cryptokitties movie
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series, they could do that.
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And you'd be left just with this string of letters and numbers on the blockchain with
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no art attached to it at all.
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So I think that's a fundamental difference between real-world collectibles where you have the object
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and they can't take it away from you
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and a digital collectible...
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We really really really wanted to put the art in the blockchain,
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because our users, I think most of them conceptually know that
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what they own is sort of some numbers, in a blockchain.
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But what you think you own, what you think of as your, cat
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is that picture of the cute little guy with the funny eyes.
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And unfortunately, the decentralized systems are just not mature enough to support art in a robust way.
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Cryptokitties are cute and complicated and they show that we still have a ways to go
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until we can really keep a digital collectible like we can a baseball card.
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When I was doing research for this video, I became super interested in what makes Cryptokitties a "game."
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If that's the sort of thing you're interested in,
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you should really check out The Verge's YouTube channel.
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One of my favorites is on the way medicine is using games to improve cognition.
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So, go check them out.