The thing I really enjoy about non-fungible tokens (NFTs) and "smart contracts" more broadly is that there's no way to get them to point to information or objects outside the blockchain without introducing a trusted third party, the whole thing you set up a blockchain to avoid.
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It seems these people have never had any disputes with anybody. Norrmally the problem is not disagreement about what a contract says. The disagreements are about facts on the ground. But then again, if you never actually listen to anyone, you might not catch that people disagree
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Well, that's the thing - these sorts of companies generally claim that their blockchain authenticates the on-the-ground facts, and "prevents tampering". Exactly *how* it's supposed to do that, though... is left as an exercise to the buyer.
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