"Bitcoin Ordinals And IP Considerations With Cameron Pick" (Podcast)

MG
Marshall, Gerstein & Borun LLP
Contributor
Marshall, Gerstein & Borun is a full service intellectual property law firm that protects, enforces and transfers the intellectual property of clients in more than 150 countries worldwide.  Nearly half the Firm’s professionals have been in-house as general counsel, patent counsel, technology transfer managers, scientists or engineers, and offer seasoned experience in devising and executing IP strategy and comprehensive IP solutions. Learn more at www.marshallip.com.
The inner workings of Bitcoin ordinals came under the microscope of Marshall Gerstein partner Cameron Pick in a recent episode of the podcast Law of Code.
United States Technology
To print this article, all you need is to be registered or login on Mondaq.com.

The inner workings of Bitcoin ordinals came under the microscope of Marshall Gerstein partner Cameron Pick in a recent episode of the podcast Law of Code. The podcast, which explores the legal aspects of cryptocurrency, explained how Bitcoin ordinals work, how people interact with and store them, and how they differ from assets stored on smart contract platforms like Ethereum and Solana.

Pick outlined the main use cases for Bitcoin ordinals, including the emergence of new ones.

"Digital assets are going to have more practical use cases in the future," Pick said. "One of the big ones will be real estate. Having real estate transactions on a blockchain would make title[s] a lot easier. And then ticketing. If you can have tickets on the blockchain, you don't have to worry about counterfeiting in the same way that you do now."

Having NFTs on the bitcoin blockchain could also reduce fraud, according to Pick, as people are more easily duped on other platforms into making big purchases when the NFT in question doesn't represent the digital asset they think it does.

"By putting it on the Bitcoin blockchain – where you have, on this public ledger, exactly what the digital asset is – you remove some of those fraud concerns," Pick said.

Pick also shared how he was first introduced to Bitcoin in 2012 and how he was inspired to learn more about it to help clients.

Catch the full episode on Spotify here and on Apple Podcasts here.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

We operate a free-to-view policy, asking only that you register in order to read all of our content. Please login or register to view the rest of this article.

"Bitcoin Ordinals And IP Considerations With Cameron Pick" (Podcast)

United States Technology
Contributor
Marshall, Gerstein & Borun is a full service intellectual property law firm that protects, enforces and transfers the intellectual property of clients in more than 150 countries worldwide.  Nearly half the Firm’s professionals have been in-house as general counsel, patent counsel, technology transfer managers, scientists or engineers, and offer seasoned experience in devising and executing IP strategy and comprehensive IP solutions. Learn more at www.marshallip.com.
See More Popular Content From

Mondaq uses cookies on this website. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies as set out in our Privacy Policy.

Learn More