tv Bares fur Rares Deutsche Welle April 25, 2021 7:30pm-8:30pm CEST
7:30 pm
the $911.00 the theory of the porsche. in 60 minutes. right through to keep the brave out of the people for over rich and home the 4th time for the most mission that we can come up with at least the bottom of the bellies at the dragons this word. to use. on. just to let you know how it was when you only get from one room to the next on the leg line 10 meters above the ground we find out how one spaniard converted in the
7:31 pm
old church into a very unusual home later in the show. and with that a very warm welcome to a new edition of europe max let's see what else we have in to show for you. how one parisian dance account came with michael jackson iconic moonwalk and. a muster baker shows us how to make the perfect union apple strudel. iceland is famous for its volcanic landscapes and spectacular wazza falls and normally the pace of life is very slow there especially in small places like the town of who is a big on iceland's north coast it is home to just 2300 people but now it's buzzing with excitement because it could become world famous all thanks to an oscar nomination for best original song. the song is called twas the vic my
7:32 pm
hometown it comes from the movie you're a vision song contest the story of which is set in who serve it and it really is in the running for an academy award and now the whole town is doing its best to bring the osca home to his afic. this is a small harbor town of who said they located on the northern coast of iceland it's a sleepy little place mainly known for its whale watching excursions at least it was until hollywood arrived you know the song and icelandic would never win eurovision song i know i know i'm being silly but i'm just i'm just anxious the musical comedy hero vision song contest the story of fire saga put who civic on the international map in 2020 the film with hollywood stars will ferrell and rachel mcadams is set in the coastal towns it's about 2 small time musicians who are
7:33 pm
trying desperately to be in the contest following a series of disasters they end up representing iceland local entrepreneur or early or listen has seen 1st hand how the film changed the town this is the 1st time there's a real production of sort of an eye roll muscle for really excited we didn't know what this bill would be a lot like so when it came out purity very pleased with how we are depicted in this we like to make fun of ourselves so we really enjoyed hollywood doing that as well . and now the films featured track to civic my hometown has been nominated for an oscar for best original song. and believes his efforts helped get nominated he organized a campaign to get the song widely known. or not really one when the song had the
7:34 pm
chance to get to the oscars decided to go full steam ahead. to a campaign who told the local community a rally together. you can already use the bulb you've been doing has had some impact as well. the result was this video. won by and by members. well scuttle from. my hometown the most notable column in the book because the more. have been brought up and you like it or you're missing who for the most of the good or with name a new book. yes a moment i'm the only author who thought. everyone knows how to do something you know so we came together to work on this video that we have if you want to tell a funny story but also to to raise awareness that this song is his attempts to win and to get people to listen time. since the nomination everyone here is rooting for
7:35 pm
the song even the schoolchildren have learned how to sing it. it was. in the mean time preparations are underway in who civic for the academy awards in los angeles on april 25th. the main street has been given the red carpet treatment in the hopes of a win. so how do the locals rate the songs chances of chances are pretty good and it's in my opinion by far the best song out of all the ones that
7:36 pm
are coming i think the song is sketchy and the melody is beautiful and there i hope the academy or grace who's ever gets number one number one and i shrunk the one in europe and number one in the world at the moment i think this song down stunts a pretty. and so when you post this song i keep a separate role in the film but in the other song teleports on the set of comedy they are and put it so this one actually marks the turning point in the story so not something that is about you. win or lose the song about who civic has brought new life to the local community and to the personality of the town. some people live in apartments of us and houses and some even live in former churches like past kaviak his home is a converted 16th century church a modern kitchen has replaced her and instead of religious motifs the walls are now
7:37 pm
decorated with mortar off works we've met up with him in northern spain where he literally zips from one room to the next. it's heading from one room to the next via a slack line suspended 10 meters in the air in a converted church. welcome to my home and i hope you like it. is neither an artist nor a priest this multimedia designer lives in a former 16th century church now converted into a spacious loft it's located in so planted. in northern spain affording a stunning view of the region's hilly landscapes. were in the middle of nature in a forest you look at is what fascinates me most as well as the fact that this is a truly unique building. waking up in the mornings the 1st thing i see are these
7:38 pm
cars see only this stone arches and old brick work living here really is something special. inside the only reminder that this was once a place of worship is the buildings basic layout now it is home to toss his girlfriend and his dog. 36 year old toss had a modern kitchen fitted where the altar once stood and instead of statues of the holy virgin or crosses artwork hang on the walls. what you see here dates back to the year 1530. it was important to us not to change anything as far as was possible. you can still see some of the old and different layers of paint from different periods in history there's. going to you know. the design is all tossed his work he even crafted some of the furniture himself like this dining table in the tiles also came up with this quirky wine rack.
7:39 pm
the church hadn't been in use since the late 1970 s. and had fallen into disrepair eventually. sold the ruin to top. in 2016 together with the help of an architect friend taz got to work restoring the building it took 3 years i thought though that there were chunks of stone and wooden beams inside they laid but i got the elements of the plot truth given that i knew it would be done but i found out the walls are almost 500 years old just i mean good condition that i will be there you will get a full title of the letters they had to prop up the dome and bell tower just go work at it and he wouldn't people there but everything else was fine you know that effect i mean. tossed that installed a wooden frame on around a quarter of the space to create 2 separate floors there are no dividing walls which means the bad room is only separated by 3 thin metal ropes from the rest of
7:40 pm
the name. that however do get some privacy when they sleep in the converted bell tower. taz workspace for overlooks the entire interior space. the opposite room meanwhile can only be reached via a slack line suspended in mid-air. which was too much for our camera man. business but we're still figuring out what to do with that room we might turn it into a bedroom or a library. because we also need to decide how to make it accessible until then the only way across is via a 10 meter high slack line that must admit. but not everyone likes the.
7:41 pm
after hours spent at his desk loves unwinding with sports so he hits his homemade skate ramp. visit thanks for coming by. and if this is his favorite way to round off the day skating outside his very own church. you certainly need a head for heights to be moved there well what i did the movie is it certainly doesn't build anything like michael jackson but the man in our next report can certainly pull the crowds with his version in fact some escape from paris is so good that he has become an internet site. is on the shops and he's a in paris his specialty is the moonwalk which was michael jackson's famous movie back in the 1980 s. so the game has even danced in the louvre in paris. and.
7:42 pm
i still remember watching michael jackson's music video bad when i was 3 years old it for me it was more exciting than a cartoon and i was absolutely fascinated by it. michael jackson has been imitated by many but so far hardly anyone has reached such success as the 24 year old frenchman with senegalese roots from a poor paris suburb. posted this video in october 2013 and it has now received more than 10000000 clicks on instagram d. c lexi metherell you might think it's odd and ask themselves well who is this guy and where is he come from them but i think i deserve my success i worked so hard for it but i'm not surprised it's more of a release. finally i thought to myself.
7:43 pm
saif has 2300000 followers on instagram including the american wrestling and movie star wayne johnson he's also danced with certain tennis players novak djokovic. is a legend and it was a real honor. surprise i mean most of it was that he knew that i am and what i do. you know he had already known who i was for quite a while and that made me happy. leave now also works as a model he even designed his own sneakers for a french fashion label by now he is well known in paris where people approach him regularly. but it still feels weird i tell myself sometimes yes that's how it is now he will recognise you more good than when the. nowadays so the gauge makes good money with his various activities he even has
7:44 pm
a manager of the days when he danced for money on the streets of paris are long over. just to. i once lost my phone to dance to buy a new one. so clubs in one day. 100 euros they came and bought a new phone with the money. i paid with one i'm going to euro coins the salesman was really surprised but he does not need to dance on the street nowadays but he can't help himself. right now i like this move. i met on a comeback. while i. actually enjoys hanging out with his friends they can dance almost as well as he can but haven't had the same success. with all my close friends of my parents and i might not have become the person i am today. i'm very grateful to them. spending time with them does me good in them what
7:45 pm
you see in our world makes me stronger with what astri is this is why for me to want to pull the more i became an artist. for many of these games is a stark one making see on the internet as well as experience up close on the street for free. to treat yourself in head on over to instagram to. join us on your romance as to some of europe's feeling is no good sample no water in the commercial to. lean back as we showed you earlier just running architecture and fashion here on instagram. and. every 2 years she in germany and new federal hall to culture a show called booga opens doors to the public this year the city of f one is whole
7:46 pm
think the show german landscape architect. it up played a major role in getting everything ready for the visitors effort has a centuries old horticultural tradition and this play and important role in her designs we met with her shortly before the show opened. flower power in air for more than 600000 plants on a site nearly the size of 60 football pitches the festival of color. germany's federal horticultural show. is held every 2 years this time hosted by touring the state capital. the city's pages with the 17th century petersburg citadel one of the show's main sites shortly before the opening. landscape architect lowery for schneider is in charge of transforming the former fortress and military site into
7:47 pm
a lush paradise. our goal was to make this somewhat forgotten place an experience for the visitors we wanted to breathe a new life into this fantastic fortress. this is a military site that was off limits to what the locals and visitors for a long time. to do this was. a lot of work went into transforming the neglected site where buildings have fallen into disrepair. but now it's being given a glorious make over. together with her team our set up a network of paths that links the historic buildings with flower beds. when we create open spaces we're always paying attention to what is already there and kiss it away so to speak like in sleeping beauty we want to make it visible again and accentuate the atmosphere. like in the moat which can be accessed by
7:48 pm
a giant slide. the owl is team also makes things up by planting all varieties of vegetables and herbs between the flowers. there spinach garlic and mint. learn demonstrates centuries old local gardening traditions for example with woad a once highly prized plant. this is woad the plant that made air for it rich in the middle ages the leaves are used to produce blue dye it was very valuable in the middle ages they have put them in. the 1st ever international garden show it was hosted in air 1st in 865 then in 1961 when arafat was in the former communist east germany it began staging regular international horticultural shows with the new park at their heart. the echo park
7:49 pm
remains the main attraction 60 years later the huge garden complex is one of the state's top tourist attractions and will be even more colorful until this year's show ends in october 2 highlights are the new desert and tropical house as well as europe's largest on a mental flower bed. the park will be something truly spectacular spring is coming finally with temperatures rising. after 2020 people are even more keen on gardens. you can see that plants are a big topic on social media right now and that's a great. hour is really glad that this year's show is now opening she spent 3 years working to make a visit to the pages a memorable experience. and there does we really hope that visitors to the pages bag will see the fortress in a new light and noise and appreciate the new spaces with the many delicate flowers
7:50 pm
different colors and sense. and few fitting for do so it don't give them fresh input and joy in the he's a flight of especially in this coronavirus pandemic. friend of. our choice night or the federal court a cultural show in africa a city famous for its floral tradition is a real highlight in her career. aren't they beautiful as you can see austria is also home to some great blossoms the ones on its many apple trees the fruit that grow scare is perfect for one of australia's most famous treats the viennese apple strudel empress elizabeth also known as sissy nuff the sweet pastry just as much as i do and let's find out what is important when making an original viennese apple strudel in
7:51 pm
a new episode of food secrets. least i was told that in person lizabeth nickname c.c. had her apple strudel delivered by dame underground tunnel leading to the hostel but. as he said it's almost a main course soup together with soup so i think a calorie intake has been reached. if you've been a nurse and those kinds of struggles in the street ones alone so there is an apple strudel fruit struggle is the cherry strudel strawberry strudel and apricots originally. meant my name is rudolph's on
7:52 pm
the group i had pastry chef and i had damon in vienna and i've been baking apple strudel him since i was 6 years old of. your stuff and we start with the strudel dough consisting of flour the salt one egg and lukewarm water and oil we've. had so many big now we come to the highlight of only a nice apple strudel food gets we stretch the strudel dough. this is the cold confectioner must master this art. in the installed base when you toss the strudel dough up in the air it expands and becomes thinner and thinner.
7:53 pm
would lose its struggle is now so thins might you can read this book through it. do poison drums absorb the apples what would approve that means the butter comes soak it up and it doesn't become too drastic and stalls. it's black until now let's make our rum raisins used to be able to remember the raisins soak up the rum all the. money you're used to it tasting sweet and sour. i grow fruit. we're austria's largest apple growing village we have 16 different varieties so that. the team gets the climate here is ideal for growing apples because we have very cool nights warm days during autumn and they give the apples they're lovely red and
7:54 pm
yellow when you stop such an old. school they consult of dough to superintend for its food stocks and if the apples chunks are too large for the egg they destroy a student bag sister. and it's good now we add cinnamon sugar. done to mons and their daughters now there's. this gift in this round off it's wonderful flavor. so it demands and boasted that if you don't have apples with enough acidity they can do so i thought you just add some more lemon juice to the on some of the p.c. . now you lift up the front and roll the strudel it's all. good.
7:55 pm
just a little bit on the on then. you covered 2 and better food. was . the. other traditional apple strudel is served just on its own just with icing sugar sprinkled on top and i think it tastes best on its own you know. the experts always make that kind of things so easy but actually sure you would that if i try to make an apple strudel it would not look anything like that at all and with that it's time to round up the show but you probably go it just a quick reminder to check out all the details off our current view as strong on our website until we meet again from all of us here in berlin thanks for watching they
7:57 pm
7:58 pm
oh yeah living in the digital world shift. 15 minutes on d w. one thing with the kardashians which can lead to $911.00. in time most of mine and powerful sound nothing new sports car of choice for many current easy as a legend an icon an effect telling the 911 the very essence of the porsche. read. 30 minutes on d w. these places in a row for smashing all the records to. step into more gold to treasure its treasure map for modern globe trotters discover some of the record breaking summer
7:59 pm
8:00 pm
current form. this is d.w. news live from berlin. this in turn into a catastrophe the hospitals are overwhelmed by unprecedented numbers of critically ill patients also coming up from the scientific team behind the astra zeneca covert vaccine it comes a potential game changer in the fight against malaria. and 2 mostly with no polish staff no audience this year's oscars are finally going ahead with the list of nominees that's more diverse than ever before.
8:01 pm
american evanston it's good to have you with us the european union the u.k. israel and germany have all promised aid to stem an unrelenting 2nd wave of cove it that's a ravaging india infection rates are breaking world records hospital beds are scarce and lifesaving oxygen supplies are running out bodies are piling up in morgues and many fear the worst is yet to come. grief outside hospitals in delhi. disinfecting the dead the fear of infection remains even when life is pos. makeshift cremation sites like these are springing up to deal with the rising death
8:02 pm
toll. because kraemer turia and cemeteries are full of relatives they left feeling helpless as the coronavirus tests through the capital i have money i have everything but i can't get my sister. got the notice that the left in baghdad knows that it's not to get norbit good we can do good we can go. as a boy and hospitals have run out of oxygen and intensive care beds india's prime minister urged patience and caution. our jobs. i'm speaking to you on this radio show at a time when corona is testing our patience and that capacity to bear pay for many of our loved ones have left us too soon. to leave at this moment in order to win this battle we must listen to scientists. for several days
8:03 pm
running the indian government has reported more than $300000.00 new infections but experts say the true toll is much higher. doctors worry the recent surge has been fueled by a new variant this one composed of tea while the more infectious and vaccine resistant versions of the virus that's fear the result could be a virus new union is planning to send medicines and oxygen is to respond to india's request for assistance and this weekend in our mission how did things get to this point. now you know under sequestered many people are asking themselves here in india you know india group relative you were the 1st in this and demi the numbers of interactions that started winning dramatically the vaccine drive had kicked up by the beginning of the year and that created a false sense of security both within the public as well as the authorities you
8:04 pm
know politicians and governments going distracted by a series of elections with huge campaign trannies then you have these big religious gatherings with no semblance of social distancing and all the potential of turning into super vents that sent the wrong message of the people themselves became complacent and even casual and then came the 2nd lead with its variants its move mutants w. to the school or community much more deadly much more contagious than the idea minus and that's why india now finds itself. well we heard to the government saying that people should be patient but how do people feel do they feel that authorities have failed to protect the citizens of india well certainly the girls who lost loved ones marianna will be tempted to think this way people are less the medical infrastructure menstruating trying to get relatives into hospitals seeing their
8:05 pm
loved ones die because this knocks you know being able to you must be asking themselves why didn't the government anticipate this they had been secondly is it because lives in other parts of the world why not india the government is not the scrambling to do everything it can but precious time has been lost and it's coming too late well one measure that authorities have now implemented is an extended a lockdown in the capital delhi where you are but. as we know delhi has a population of 20000000 people what kind of an impact does this official lockdown even have in a city like this. you know. there's a lot of police around the other barriers which would be put down and even though it may not be a complete lockdown it's pretty close to it honestly there's a sense of fear and even panic in denny at the way this might be like wildfire people are worried people are scared and therefore i think people are being much
8:06 pm
more cautious and all that complacency and casualties that we saw earlier has evaporated. we appreciate your reporting thank you so much all right let's turn our attention now to some of the other stories making news this hour. funerals are being held for the more than 80 people who died in a fire at a baghdad hospital the blaze swept through the intensive care unit work over 1000 patients were being treated officials said the fire was set off by an exploding oxygen tank. italian coast guards have rescued more than 100 people from a fishing boat adrift in rough seas due to bad weather several patrol boats were involved in the rescue mission officials that did not confirm whether the people on board were refugees or where the boat had come from. well today is a world malaria day and new hope is on the horizon in the fight against one of the
8:07 pm
world's deadliest diseases promising new vaccines are proving affective against malaria they're based on m r a technology like that used in fires kovac 1000 shot scientists say they could help reverse the reemergence of malaria in many parts of the world. malaria hits children the hardest the disease is spread by mosquitoes but it's preventable and treatable. according to the w.h.o. 21 countries eliminated malaria in the last 2 decades. but due to the current a pandemic it's harder for patients to be seen by doctors and be tested and diagnosed if you harbor malaria or infection especially if you're a child or pregnant woman and you don't get adequate treatment quickly then you can die barrier. was severe malaria and so when the child being quite well to being
8:08 pm
dead within 24 hours. larry symptoms also complicate matters fever is one of the main indicators just like to cope with 19 another hurdle for medical care. mosquito nets 5 to to controlling the spread of the disease a given out on a house by house basis not ideal during a pump. malaria is spreading and the current vaccine is only 40 percent effective have a new candidate has just been shown to be highly effective in trials human trials for malaria vaccines using m r n a technology similar it's about used against cove it on the horizon so there's a chance that covert 19 could not only make the malaria epidemic worse it could also shed light on how to end it. earlier we spoke to dr richard kala he's a professor at the yale school of medicine in connecticut and he explained to us how this new generation of anti malaria drugs work the vaccine that we're working
8:09 pm
on which is still pre-clinical it's an animal testing taken just takes advantage of a gene that we discovered about 10 years ago that's produced by the malaria parasite that acts to suppress the immune response to the parasite and so our vaccine takes advantage of this protein product called p.m.s. and by vaccinate against it the host can clear the infection on its own and we combine this vaccine antigen with a new type of r.n.a. called self amplifying our new in many ways it's a 2nd generation of the m.r.d. vaccines currently used for covert because it persists at the injection site for about 6 to 8 weeks so you can inject a very small amounts it can pre be produced much more quickly much lower cost $1.00 can make about a 1000000 human doses in
8:10 pm
a leader of synthetic cell free fluid so it would be potentially much easier to distribute much less expensive and it could be produced at sites around the world in of no larry affected countries. that was dr richard b. of cholera a professor at yale school of medicine talking to w. a short time ago. well hollywood is gearing up to present the 93rd academy awards ceremony tonight but while the red carpet is rolled out just as every year the oscars will be unlike any other before with no host and no audiences show producers are still hoping to bring some glamour to the ceremony most of the films up for awards tonight have never made it to a movie theater streaming services have come to the rescue both as viewing platforms and also as creative engines for high class cinema we have this overview of the nominees. meg with 11 nominations is technically the front runner of this
8:11 pm
year's oscars us david finch is black and white to the golden age of hollywood is up for best film and best director gary oldman could take home his 2nd best acting performance of the alcoholic screenwriter helen manc mankiewicz the man who wrote citizen kane. any distraction eliminated every. fellow oscar winner of viola davis is a favorite for best actress performance and the music drama rainey's black bottom playing the 1st black female blues artist truly caught the professional. it is my assumption i'm playing her because she had to know her because it was i who were or going. dying under the weight of a culture. didn't understand you were. also nominated
8:12 pm
from mar a nice black bottom is a biola davis' costar chadwick boseman who recently died of cancer but his final performance as a blues trumpeter to determine to make it to the top could earn him a posthumous academy award for best actor i read going to chicago to protest with me. but it's no place to be with 6 nominations aaron sorkin's the trial of the she character 7 is one of this year's most political contenders a group of activists protesting the vietnam war face a kangaroo court and this real life drama sasha baron cohen as activist every huffman has a good shot at the oscar for best supporting actor i am tired of you judas and the black messiah and now the 60 set drama has 2 supporting actor nominees daniel as black panther leader fred thompson. and like keith stanfield as the informer who
8:13 pm
betrays him to the f.b.i. this year's oscars are the most diverse ever 9 nonwhite activists are nominated. to be including steven ewan he's the 1st asian american to receive an oscar nomination for best actor for his performance in me natalie as a korean immigrant who moved this family to arkansas to become a farmer. there is something so confident about its own point of view. why are another of the secrets upon origines be juxtaposed to you know what mr american is. the true front runner this year considered a shoo in for best film and best director is no mental end the poignant road movie from china spawn director chloe joe francis mcdormand place of van living modern
8:14 pm
day known that through no. homeless i'm just. the same thing right now. no midland explores a life lived off the great frances mcdormand has a good shot at her 3rd oscar for best actress her appeal on the stage of the 2018 academy awards for more diversity among nominees is already coming to. europe to date d.w. news up next it's shifted to living in the digital age america and the steam from me and the entire team in berlin thanks for watching.
8:15 pm
they get to go beyond. any. take on the world without. all the. stories that matter to you. we are here is actually our. why are some. digital art works like this one are selling for big money thanks largely to f.t.s. provenance ascribing block chain tech but who profits from the crypt art market and what danger is that's the trying to hide that's our topic unshift today.
8:16 pm
paintings regularly self a crazy prices of buying a digital works for $69000000.00 us dollars that you could download for free that's insane and yet that's what this digital kalash sold for by the us artist mike winkleman who goes by the name people he could hardly believe it himself. was going to mellow like yeah. unfathomable number to be quite honest. i think i would have been surprised to know that kalash is currently the 3rd most expensive work ever auctioned by a living artist and the people j. peck is just the tip of the iceberg the singer grinds auction off digital art works for nearly $6000000.00 in just 20 minutes to get from the un cat one for around $600000.00 and the dutch musician sold a digital concert for 1200000 dollars that's
8:17 pm
a lot of money the hype surrounding crypto art has been triggered by an f.t.c. cryptographic datasets that guarantee authenticity and origin a bit like a signature on a painting curator have found things and f.t.'s will change the art market we have pretty much waiting for technical standards. to work. in he needs unique and can be treated easily with a laugh. minimum 20 years. digital art used to be hard to sell or trade but no thanks to any teeth even though the original making here artwork attractive both as a collectible and as investment philip summers is sold online and paid for with cryptocurrency this attracts a totally new type of customer and there are people that are interested in art and . darshan the sudden spike in the when is primarily brings an important source of
8:18 pm
income but it also means of a new kind of appreciation i think that there was no way to collect that were before and so bad but it was really influential so they have a huge huge our impact our visual language are moral and so i need you now be on the. look at them as you know we are as i am super super excited about. entering the art market is also becoming easier because artists can simply turn they were into any tools and sell them on one of the many online. could this help democratize the market in more mass to get the more new people and you will see it will come into the market and new geographies so i think and it and new technological standard will. create it and the artists of the world much closer together in trade and collecting and physical art world was able to
8:19 pm
while some see n f t's as the next big thing others and so sure they're true art they believe it's a speculation bubble that will eventually burst there aren't only f.t.'s of art pretty much anything digital can be turned into an n.f.t. from tweets to virtual collectible cards to video game figures but hold on let's start from the top how exactly do an f.p.s. work well. they're created in the block chain here's how. the block chain is a chain of data blocks bound to each other using crypto graphic principles before a new block is added say a transaction like a frequent purchase it 1st gets verified by thousands or even millions of computers on the network in the block you can generate so-called tokens push can represent a particular value by the right to carry out an anonymous transaction in the block chain like
8:20 pm
a digital coupon you can trade with. there are different types of crypto tokens. one r. and f t's which stands for fungible token fungible means exchangeable so non fungible means non exchange for making unique or scarce money is fungible whether you know $1.00 u.s. dollar bill or another doesn't matter the value remains the same. we used to think of digital art as somewhat fungible because it can be downloaded and copied theoretically and most number of times but now you can turn it into an n.f.l. team by a process called token isolation and trays of additional objects authenticity and uniqueness and if she contains all the data about who created the content how much it was sold for and who the owner is the tokens are saved in the block chain using a smart contract thanks to their protected from being manipulated. currently n.f.t. trading many happens in the fear and block chain so you need
8:21 pm
a crypto wallet and the cryptocurrency ether to purchase something but what happens after you've bought a digital artwork this is an important question since n f t's only say that information about the outward not the piece itself often all you have is a link to a safe location and we all have this problem right digital data can be lost or deleted which in this case would be a pretty expensive error message and there are other problems we ask expert in berlin about possible risks for buyers. when you buy an n.f.t. you don't get the copyright of the oh look you really do entry on the block chain. and this unique and digitally read so to speak is this if. there is nothing preventing the artist from saying hey i'm creating
8:22 pm
a 2nd edition of this art work i use the token. token. but the lawyer doesn't think this is likely to happen despite the current type tests have shown no such inclination. hi i'm a god they don't have any incentive to destroy the trust of investors and purchases making more tokens for a piece of all they had initially said they would. the conditions of sale for a not with a written in the small contracts of the n f t's these can be read online for example on this website the contract can be found on the given a theory of address and anyone can view it. if the artist breaks the contract and thereby devalues the artwork then you could claim for compensation. such a case hasn't occurred yet. a further problem is
8:23 pm
how can you know the person offering the n.f.t. art is the one who made the work british tech expert terence eaton warned of this and 2018 he put himself down in the blocks and as the creator of the mona lisa registered his work on the art verification platform there is art and nobody noticed anything strange so how can artists protect their rights on line we ask catarina fatter from artists right society in new york. right east. he let them know that it's a work that's still under copyright leslie. even if he literally cannot you will be legally penalized in the long run. but how can you be sure that the person who is selling the n.f.t. is the person who maybe aren't mark after all fake identities are a fundamental problem on the internet. of
8:24 pm
thieves who always try to fake identities that's why solving the problem of identification is considered the holy grail of the 21st century. why did you feel the benefits we now have institutions which try to verify the identity of votes is. one example is the sales platform foundation artists can't just register themselves they have to be explicitly invited like for example the russian artists pussy riot. other platforms are also trying to keep fakes off their marketplace because they harm their the chip missing but they don't always succeed. these digital dimes are pictures by us artist corbin rainbolt reports up for sale by unknown people as n f t's since then he had to clear copyright stamped with pictures not pretty but
8:25 pm
helpful. yet there also notable advantages for artists thanks to the block chain artists can profit from all resales if their work and keep up with who owns their art. and interests they can potentially a lot a lot more. to the artists in the guards at work and the. but the biggest problem with n f t's is the amount of energy they use according to digic khana missed one single transaction on the a theorem block chain has c o 2. equal to playing around 6000 hours of you tube videos that's like streaming videos nonstop for $250.00 days this catastrophic carbon footprint of n f t's is being discussed in the art scene. the turkish artist and scientist act examined how much energy is consumed by crypto and empties. his calculations show that every digital transaction involving an n.f.t.
8:26 pm
whether you're creating bidding on selling or transferring one uses huge amounts of energy. in the case of the theory of blocked chain this is largely due to the proof workstand it like each bit of every transaction gets verified by the block chain. this is why many block train start ups as well as the theory i'm working to improve their huge c o 2 footprints. you will see that others will come to the market with. much more efficient energy consumption so this is big. and seems. well learn how to who they are with their friends. until then charity auctions such as carbon drop can help counteract some of the damage it's
8:27 pm
like people may say works available for the oceans and then the c o 2 emissions were compensated for by a platform similarly to flying the proceeds went to the open earth foundation which supports innovative and environmentally friendly to chitral projects. worth a project but it doesn't solve the problem if you're thinking too bad i would have liked on a quick to art work but not with that kind of environmental impact than here's the tip the website people generator creates pictures like those from the original kalash even if it was impressed what do you think are crypt art and the future of the art market or is the whole thing just to try and tell us your thoughts goodbye and see you next time.
8:28 pm
we're dealing with. george i. want to. find a. timeless to design and powerful sound music in the sports car of choice for many current easiest alleging iconic. selling the 911 the very essence of the porsche. next. smart kids. so few times digital media consumption changed the brain explain your ologists behavioral experts and addiction experts discuss the latest scientific research on the screen generation.
8:29 pm
in 45 minutes on t.v. douglas. in the heart of climate change. for cosmic. what's in store for players playing for the future playing the. cards for the mega-cities. inside. the term. play the odds in absolute odds of playing. live. up to that 9 eleventh's style icon and unmistakable face of the porsche brand cut 3 numbers that define an entire class of cars cut the
27 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on