Sir Tim Berners-Lee has sold an NFT of the original source code for the world wide web for an eye-watering $5.4 million, but the buyer could be in for an unpleasant surprise: a security researcher has ...
Sir Tim Berners-Lee famously gave the source code to the World Wide Web away for free. But now he has raised over $5.4 million by auctioning off an autographed copy as a non-fungible token, or NFT, in ...
NFT season is still going strong. The NFT of the source code for the World Wide Web, auctioned by WWW inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee, has sold for $5,434,500 at a Sotheby's auction. It was put up for ...
Sir Tim Berners-Lee's original source code for the World Wide Web, represented as a non-fungible token (NFT), has sold at auction for $5.4 million. The NFT, which is a type of blockchain-based asset ...
There have already been a few high-profile pieces of internet history sold as non-fungible tokens, but you'll soon have a chance at one of the most important pieces of them all. As BBC News and the ...
Computer scientist Tim Berners-Lee created the World Wide Web in 1989. On Wednesday, he auctioned the world wide web in the form of a non-fungible token or NFT, which sold to an anonymous buyer for $5 ...
NFT game Code of Jokers Evolutions has been scrapped by Sega after someone probably said, "Hey, why we doing this?" ...
Forty-four bids have driven the NFT's price up from a starting $1,000 to the current $2.8 million. AFP via Getty Images An NFT representing the origins of the Internet as we know it had attracted a ...
George Walker became interested in NFTs in March and started learning blockchain code. Kaleb Johnson tweeted about an NFT coding question, and Walker responded offering his help. The pair joined ...