- Joined
- Nov 26, 2016
You're just not going to put an entire video onto the blockchain. The best approach I can think of is taking individual screenshots in certain random intervals and putting that onto the blockchain instead. Therefore, if someone decides to change the video, the shortened or longer length and many frames that require precision to match up makes this nearly infeasible.muh blockchain solves this but unironically.
And, it will still not be cheap. The most reasonable method is to take these snapshots and put the URL onto the blockchain in the form of an ERC-1155 standard which batches multiple NFTs (typ. ERC-721) into a single contract.
Who's to say the tokenised URL (NFT) won't be tampered with? An NFT is just a token for a URL that points to an image. There's ways to change the image without changing the URL, though having such a system will complicate the matter enough. I suggested multiple random intervals, if there are several snapshots, then there will be a large amount of snapshots to replace.
This also brings forth the importance to archive the image(s) using archive.today. There is an existing service that takes a snapshot of tweets and puts it onto the blockchain. This image can then be archived properly and in my opinion the combo is just as good as a link archive for preservation purposes. Lacking html information is a huge downside, as such can be used to find sock accounts and other underlying information at times.
They're better off just trying to rationalise whatever the content was to normies.
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