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Writer's pictureFahad H

NBA Says Basketball Player Can’t Tokenize His Contract After All


Spencer Dinwiddie took a shot at tokenization, however the National Basketball Association blocked him.

The NBA mentioned Friday that Dinwiddie’s plan to pledge a part of his contract earnings for a safety token providing violates the league’s collective bargaining settlement, according to the New York Times.

“The described arrangement is prohibited by the C.B.A., which provides that ‘no player shall assign or otherwise transfer to any third party his right to receive compensation from the team under his uniform player contract,’” the league mentioned.

Dinwiddie appeared to disagree with the evaluation, writing on Twitter, “The architecture by definition is not an assignment lol FUD.”

It is unclear if the NBA spoke to Dinwiddie earlier than offering the assertion to the Times. However, the Brooklyn Nets guard indicated that he had informed the league about his intentions earlier than they have been publicly introduced, writing, “to put this quite simply I’m not assigning my contract and have been explicit in that when I’ve spoken to them.”

“The news tonight is disappointing because all it does is inspire #FUD in the birth of a previously unrealized asset class under the assumption that I’m breaking a rule that I’ve been clear I’m not breaking in multiple conversation,” he wrote, concluding:

“I look forward to an understanding because as I stated in the previous articles it was made with the @NBA in mind. Hopefully being able to bring added fan engagement to the different players/teams and liquidity for team owners.”

A publicist for Dinwiddie didn’t instantly reply to a request for remark. A spokesperson for the NBA despatched CoinDesk the identical assertion shared with the Times.

Fan shares

Dinwiddie revealed Thursday that he supposed to tokenize a part of his contract on the ethereum blockchain, with a purpose to increase $13.5 million from his three-year, $35 million contract (Dinwiddie is about to make $16 million in his first 12 months).

As a part of the DREAM Fan Shares platform, Dinwiddie outlined an organization the place any entertainer may tokenize their contract, elevating a part of their wage upfront to take a position or in any other case use instantly. Token holders would obtain Dinwiddie’s common wage funds, recouping their investments and incomes curiosity.

Paxos Trust Company was set to offer custody and escrow companies for the mission, paying buyers out within the Paxos Standard stablecoin. The firm was unavailable for touch upon Friday.

Dinwiddie’s plan is receiving public assist: on Friday, presidential candidate Andrew Yang, who has praised blockchain up to now and advised a federal framework for cryptocurrency regulation, wrote that he thought the plan was “genius.” He added that he was “disappointed the NBA is disallowing it.”

Earlier Friday, Dinwiddie also revealed that he had partnered with the Tron Foundation and its CEO, Justin Sun, to donate 8.2 bitcoin to charity by promoting his game-worn footwear for the 2019/2020 season.

He reassured followers that whatever the NBA’s potential points along with his contract plan, he would make the donation, writing:

“Also, in case you were worried I’m still going to give the 8.2btc to charity from my shoes lol”


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