X2Y2 stated in a lengthy Twitter thread that QQL is following the recordindustry’s ownership model by deciding to restrict the marketplace through its smart contract.
On its first day, QQL Mint Pass produced $17 million in NFTs. The initiative enables anybody to make official art based on the QQL generative algorithm developed by software developer Dandelion Wist and Fidenza’s Tyler Hobbs, which is set to be distributed to the public.
The final price for all 900 mint passes ended at 14 ETH. In total, the project raised 126,000 ETH.
The project coded the delegated wallet for the NFT marketplace to be blocked, thereby banning transactions with the marketplace. X2Y2 and the NFT trading platform SudoAMM are two famous markets that do not impose royalties on every transaction, which fueled online arguments regarding the future of NFT artist compensation last month.
In its post, the NFT marketplace explained that it is not a 0% royalty platform, as some on Twitter implied, but that users can choose to impose (or not enforce) royalties.
The platform also stated that it believes in a “fair royalty” approach in which customers pick the royalty amount to pay and authors choose who they want to serve:
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