I'm really interested in this.
I asked on the bitcoin thread whether it was obligatory to use a cryptocurrency to buy an NFT and was told by [MENTION=12901]CheeseRolls[/MENTION] and [MENTION=599]beorhthelm[/MENTION] that it was as that was how your ownership was recorded.
If an electronic ticket is classed as an NFT then clearly cryptocurrencies don't need to be involved. Is that how you see it?
Also, if an electronic ticket is an NFT, why isn't a paper ticket? Or is it?
So is an Albion digital ST an NFT? If not, isn't the whole blockchain aspect superfluous?
I would argue that tickets/season tickets can be represented as NFTs, but that does not mean that all tickets are NFTs. Also bear in mind this has nothing to do with what the Crawley mob want to do.
NFTs are minted through smart contracts that assign ownership and manage the transferability of the NFT's. When someone creates or mints an NFT, they execute code stored in smart contracts that conform to different standards, such as ERC-721. This information is added to the blockchain where the NFT is being managed.
If you take the current season ticket arrangements. Transferring tickets can be painful. The burden is either on the ticket owner to find someone they can personally vouch for (friends and family) or the club via the ticket exchange. Away ticket sales, transfer etc is a complete grey area.
Earlier this season I bought an away ticket from another NSC member. It worked via mutual trust. He posted the ticket trusting I would pay, I sent the money trusting the ticket was in the post. It all worked out fine, but a smart contract would de-risk this. There are a couple more blockchain related technologies, which can be added into a smart contract.
KYC - Know your customer. Anyone who has been through this opening a bank account knows what a pain this is. With emerging blockchain KYC services, you will own that data and control how it is used. The first advantage is that you do this once and then any requests to verify information about you, you point it at your service. Your service doesn't have to share any information just respond to assertions. "Where does Tom Hark Live?" - "No Does Tom Hark Live near Preston Park?" Yes, Are there recent utility bills to verify this? "Yes" has Tom Hark paid them "No" The KYC is trusted by you with your data and by third parties as they verify your information to an agreed standard.
Oracles - blockchains are not that smart. If you right a smart contract like a simple bet on who will win a game and how much money will be paid, the blockchain has no way of knowing the result, unless the smart contract references another service. Oracles use multiple trusted sources to determine the true outcome and then become the trusted source for the smart contract.
With an NFT season ticket, the club could write a smart contract giving the ticket holder the ability to sell match tickets at a price capped to the match price (makes touting difficult), determine who a ticket can be resold to for example no one with a football banning order in the UK/Europe/the World. No one with a Russian passport. U18 tickets in some parts of the ground can not be sold to adults, in other parts of the ground they can, but the price difference goes to the club not the seller.
You place the ticket on an exchange and get back a payment in crypto or goods in exchange (football ticket swap for concert ticket for example). Hassle free for you. The club can determine exactly who is turning up, without having to run a membership scheme. They can reward season ticket holders for coming to games, or take a percentage cut every time a ticket is sold.