New Black Owned Entertainment Platform ‘360NFT’ Launches With Willie Taylor as Debut Artist
A Black-owned music NFT platform, powered by Trapchain, Inc, has collaborated with indie music artist and native Chicagoan Willie Taylor, to drop his first NFT for his music project, “Write My Wrongs.”
Taylor first gained notoriety as a contestant from MTV’s “Making the Band 4”, where Sean Combs chose him (P-Diddy) to be a member and one of the main vocalists for the band Day26 on August 26.
360NFT’s launch and debut NFT release commemorate the band’s popularity and success.
Its streamlined ecosystem reportedly makes it easy for users to thrive on the blockchain without the need to code, navigate complicated technology, or handle the delivery.
The platform endeavors to help artists leverage exposure while maximizing their economic potential with an “innovative” cryptocurrency technology platform that monetizes content and music assets.
Built specifically for the music and entertainment industry, 360NFT allows artists, agents and labels to seamlessly make their content and music assets available by leveraging their technology to monetize collectible assets for compensation under the Ethereum and SKALE network.
“What sets 360NFT apart from other NFT experiences, such as platforms like UJO, is that most others cast too wide of a net. They haven’t built or provided an adequate solution to the pain points of music specific genres needed to be addressed across the board,” explains Casmir Patterson, a Certified Consensys Developer and Binance fellow, who has been in blockchain since 2011.
“360NFT has streamlined and applied a particular structure to develop a strong community around our token curated playlist within the entertainment sector. We also provide a white label solution to assist genres starting with trap music and hip hop, as well as Afro Beat, Latin, reggaeton and K-Pop,” adds Mark Bush, whose company, SongPro, pioneered the first African American owned portable, digital multimedia device manufactured in history in the early 2000’s.