What 1,500+ NFT-related Patent Applications Reveal About Big Brands
I looked at 1500+ NFT-related patent applications from the last 4 years. Here's what big brands are up to.
Dear Readers,
Welcome to another data-driven deep dive. Today we examine NFTs through four years of patent applications from major companies.
Before we jump into the findings, a word of auction:
Patents ≠ Innovation. Our patent system has flaws, like encouraging patent trolls and limiting idea-sharing.
Only a small share of these patents ever become real products.
Still, patents offer valuable insight. By studying them, we glimpse what large brands might be plotting for the future. That's what this analysis aims to show.
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Key Findings
Patents span diverse industries like finance, gaming, and media.
Quiet innovation: Some of the brands on the list have not yet publicly announced any Web3-related projects
Leading the pack: Bank of America, Nike, eBay, Shopify, Sony, Disney, Snap, and Meta top the NFT patent charts.
Nike's early entry: Dominating filings until mid-2022, Nike had its eyes on Web3 as early as 2019.1 For more, see my Nike case study.
Ebb and flow: NFT patent filings peaked in March 2023 and declined by summer.