Donald Trump's recently released NFT collection, which has made millions of dollars, has come under fire for allegedly using copyrighted photos.
What Happened: Some of the 45,000 NFT collection's photographs, according to Twitter users, look suspicious.
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Several of the designs seem to be Trump's head on images from stock photography, small apparel business websites, or even clothing available on Amazon and Walmart.
It appears that Donald Trump's NFT image of himself as a cowboy comes from an Amazon image that was slightly altered. https://t.co/B0b2SUSbX9 pic.twitter.com/OA8L2rHw4J
— Matthew Sheffield (@mattsheffield) December 16, 2022
One design, in which Trump was depicted as a fighter pilot, supposedly came from a Shutterstock photo.
On Twitter, a commenter questioned if Trump had obtained permission from Reuters before using a picture of the former president playing golf that was taken by one of its photographers.
“Even the folds in his pants are the same, lolz! Did Reuters greenlight this? Yikes,” the user said.
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The Trump golf NFT is a slimed-down and photoshopped-up take from a David Moir/Reuters file photo from 2011, when Trump was playing at his Scotland club.
— SkeeterBombay (@SkeeterBombay) December 18, 2022
Even the folds in his pants are the same, lolz!
Did Reuters greenlight this? Yikes. pic.twitter.com/BAEnO2qYYe
Read also: If You Invested $1,000 In Donald Trump NFTs, Here's How Much You'd Have Now
Some people speculated that Trump would be sued for copyright infringement over the popular digital trading cards.
Why It Matters: The former president's "major announcement" last week turned out to be the release of the NFT collection. They were sold at a price of $99 per NFT, and all 45,000 images were quickly purchased.
The digital trading cards show Trump as a variety of characters, including a superhero, an astronaut, and a cowboy.
The cheapest NFT, according to Opensea, is 0.31 Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH), or $369.36 at the time of writing. So far 6,619 ETH, or $7,799,221.03 worth of the NFTs, have been exchanged in total.
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Photo: Courtesy of Gage Skidmore on flickr.