Future Trends
NFTs, DAOs, and blockchain promise to transform how cultural IP is owned, distributed, and monetized. What’s real and what’s hype?
In 2021, a digital artwork sold for $69 million as an NFT. Traditional art world insiders scoffed. Crypto enthusiasts celebrated. A year later, the NFT market had collapsed 97%. What does this mean for cultural IP?
Understanding Web3 for Cultural IP
Web3 encompasses several technologies:
- Blockchain: Decentralized, transparent record-keeping
- NFTs (Non-Fungible Tokens): Unique digital ownership certificates
- DAOs (Decentralized Autonomous Organizations): Community-governed entities
- Smart Contracts: Self-executing agreements
For cultural IP, these technologies promise:
- Direct creator-to-collector relationships
- Automatic royalty payments
- Fractional ownership of cultural assets
- Community governance of cultural projects
Some of these promises are real. Some are hype.
What’s Real
1. Digital Ownership
NFTs do enable verifiable ownership of digital cultural assets. This matters as culture increasingly moves online.
For digital artists, musicians, and creators, NFTs offer a way to monetize work that was previously unmonetizable (easily copied digital files).
2. Creator Economics
Smart contracts can automate royalty payments. When an NFT is resold, the original creator can automatically receive a percentage.
This changes the economics of cultural creation. Creators benefit from secondary markets, not just initial sales.
3. Global Access
Web3 platforms are globally accessible. A Chinese artist can sell directly to collectors worldwide without intermediaries.
This democratizes access to cultural markets.
What’s Hype
1. Guaranteed Appreciation
NFTs were marketed as investments guaranteed to appreciate. They weren’t. Most NFTs lost value. Many became worthless.
Cultural value and financial value are different. Don’t confuse them.
2. Decentralization
Web3 promises to eliminate intermediaries. In practice, new intermediaries emerged—NFT marketplaces, crypto exchanges, wallet providers.
Power shifted, but didn’t disappear.
3. Community Governance
DAOs promised community control of cultural projects. In practice, most DAOs were controlled by token holders with large stakes—new forms of centralization.
True decentralized governance remains elusive.
The CAAP Perspective
From a CAAP standpoint, Web3 technologies are tools, not solutions.
They can help with:
- Distribution: Direct creator-to-audience channels
- Monetization: New revenue models for digital cultural IP
- Provenance: Verifiable authenticity and ownership history
- Community: New forms of audience engagement
But they don’t replace the fundamentals:
- Compelling cultural content
- Clear audience understanding
- Thoughtful experience design
- Effective marketing and distribution
Practical Applications
How might cultural exporters actually use Web3?
1. Digital Collectibles
Limited-edition digital versions of cultural artifacts or experiences. Not as investments, but as collectibles for fans.
2. Membership NFTs
NFTs that grant access to exclusive cultural experiences, behind-the-scenes content, or community membership.
3. Fractional Ownership
Allowing multiple people to own shares of expensive cultural assets, democratizing access to high-value cultural IP.
4. Creator Royalties
Using smart contracts to ensure ongoing compensation for cultural creators when their work is resold or licensed.
The Risks
Web3 also poses risks for cultural IP:
- Environmental impact: Blockchain transactions consume significant energy
- Speculation: Financial speculation can distort cultural value
- Exclusion: Crypto complexity excludes non-technical audiences
- Volatility: Cryptocurrency price swings create business uncertainty
The Verdict
Web3 is neither revolution nor pure hype. It’s a set of tools with genuine applications for cultural IP, wrapped in excessive speculation and unrealistic promises.
The technologies will mature. The speculation will subside. What’s left will be useful infrastructure for certain types of cultural creation and distribution.
For cultural exporters, the approach should be: experiment, but don’t bet the farm. Learn about these technologies. Try small projects. But don’t abandon proven strategies for unproven hype.
The future of cultural IP will be built on solid fundamentals, with Web3 as one tool among many—not a replacement for the hard work of creating and distributing excellent cultural experiences.
About Ian Xia: Cultural strategist, founder of Lightopia and Immersia, and architect of CAAP™ (Culture As A Product). Ian helps cultural organizations and creative entrepreneurs take their IP to international markets.

