SHANGHAI (Reuters) – China’s Ant Group on Wednesday sought to draw a distinction between non-fungible tokens (NFTs) available on its platforms and cryptocurrencies currently subject to a crackdown by Beijing, after users expressed confusion.
Ant, the Jack Ma-controlled fintech group, put on sale two NFT-backed app images via its payment platform Alipay and all the items quickly sold out on Wednesday.
Ant’s adoption of non-fungible tokens caused confusion on social media where they were linked to virtual currencies such as bitcoin, which have the same underlying technology.
“Alipay selling NFT products. Isn’t that illegal transaction?” one comment posted on Twitter-like Weibo said.
Ant, which is undergoing a government-ordered revamp restructuring after the collapse of its mega-IPO last year, on Wednesday said non-fungible tokens and cryptocurrencies were two different things.
“NFT is not interchangeable, nor divisible, making it different by nature from cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin,” said a spokesperson at AntChain, the Ant unit that develops blockchain-based technology solutions.
He said that NFTs can be used to create a unique signature for digital assets.
Winston Ma, NYU Law School adjunct professor, also highlighted the confusion over the nature of NFTs.
“Are NFTs virtual currencies? Or, are NFTs certificates for virtual currencies? And more importantly, are NFTs securities? These are the questions that no major digital economy’s legislature has ever answered,” Ma said.
In addition to app images, NFT digital artworks are also auctioned on Ant’s Alipay platform. AntChain said in product agreements that it provides blockchain technologies to NFT products.
China has over the past month intensified a campaign against cryptocurrency trading and mining, part of efforts to fend off financial risks.
(Reporting by Samuel Shen and Andrew Galbraith. Editing by Jane Merriman)