Introduction
As of early January 2026, the NFT (non-fungible token) ecosystem remains a contested space where creators assert strong legal and technical ownership claims while major platforms continue to exercise significant gatekeeping power. IP ownership in this context combines traditional copyright (automatic protection of original creative works) with blockchain-based provenance: an NFT is a unique digital token on a blockchain that typically points to or embeds a work (image, video, music, collectible) and records ownership transfers publicly and immutably.
Creators hope that minting an NFT gives them verifiable, transferable, and potentially perpetual control over their work — including the ability to earn royalties on secondary sales through smart contracts. However, most trading and display still happen on centralized marketplaces like OpenSea, Blur, Magic Eden, and Foundation, which enforce their own rules, control user interfaces, set fees, and can delist, freeze, or restrict access to collections regardless of blockchain record.
Late 2025 brought several important shifts. OpenSea completed its transition to fully supporting off-chain orders with on-chain settlement, reducing gas costs but keeping most collection data and moderation under their control. Blur introduced mandatory royalty enforcement in mid-2025 after creator backlash, yet many collections still operate with optional royalties. High-profile lawsuits continued: in November 2025, a federal court in New York partially dismissed claims against OpenSea for secondary copyright infringement but allowed certain direct-liability claims to proceed, leaving the legal status of platform liability uncertain. Meanwhile, Ethereum Layer-2 solutions and alternative chains (Solana, Polygon, Base) gained traction for lower fees, yet most trading volume and visibility remain concentrated on a few dominant marketplaces.
Predictions for 2026
In 2026, blockchain ownership claims will become technically stronger but practically weaker for the majority of creators due to persistent centralized gatekeeping. Most NFT activity will continue flowing through a handful of marketplaces that control discovery, liquidity, and user experience.
Royalty enforcement will improve modestly. By mid-2026, expect 70–80% of major collections on Blur and Magic Eden to have mandatory royalty settings (typically 5–10%), driven by creator pressure and competitive positioning. However, sophisticated traders will continue using aggregator tools and private OTC (over-the-counter) deals to bypass royalties, keeping real secondary royalty capture rates around 40–60% for most collections.
Decentralized alternatives will grow but stay niche. Platforms like Zora, Manifold, and Foundation expand creator-centric features — programmable royalties, on-chain editions, and direct minting — yet they capture less than 15% of total trading volume. True fully on-chain marketplaces (no centralized server dependency) remain slow and expensive for casual users, limiting mainstream adoption.
Display and social proof remain heavily centralized. The most popular NFT viewing experiences (Twitter/X profile pictures, Discord showcases, mobile wallets) depend on OpenSea or Alchemy-hosted metadata. If a collection gets delisted or metadata frozen by a marketplace, the NFT can become effectively invisible even though the token and file remain on-chain. This creates a paradox: creators own the asset on the blockchain, but platforms own the context and audience access.
Cross-chain fragmentation increases. Creators mint on multiple chains to reduce fees and reach different audiences, but this splits liquidity and confuses buyers. Aggregators help, yet they still route most traffic through the same dominant front-ends.
By the end of 2026, expect the majority of high-value NFT sales to occur either through private deals or on marketplaces that enforce creator royalties only when it suits their competitive strategy. Public, on-chain provenance will be more reliable than ever, but real economic control will remain concentrated in centralized intermediaries.
Challenges and Risks
The biggest risk is platform delisting or blacklisting. A single marketplace decision can wipe out visibility and floor price for an entire collection overnight, even when the underlying tokens remain valid. Creators have almost no legal recourse because marketplace terms of service grant broad discretion to remove content or restrict accounts.
Secondary royalty bypass remains widespread. Despite technical improvements, determined buyers can route transactions through private relays or use royalty-optional aggregators, reducing creator earnings significantly.
Metadata centralization creates fragility. Many collections still rely on centralized IPFS gateways or platform-hosted images. If those servers go offline or restrict access, the NFT points to nothing visible, damaging perceived value.
Market volatility and low liquidity punish smaller creators. With trading volume down from 2021–2022 peaks, only top-tier collections maintain meaningful secondary markets, leaving most NFT creators with one-time mint revenue and little ongoing benefit.
Legal uncertainty persists. Courts have not clearly settled whether marketplaces are liable for secondary infringement when they facilitate sales of copyrighted works without permission, leaving creators vulnerable if they themselves do not fully own the IP they mint.
Opportunities
Several developments offer meaningful paths forward. Creator-first protocols gain momentum. Zora’s 2025–2026 upgrades to on-chain editions and automated royalty splits let artists set precise terms that are harder to circumvent. Manifold’s tools allow advanced smart contract customization, giving creators more control over editions, burns, and revenue splits.
Direct-to-collector models expand. Artists increasingly sell NFTs through personal websites, email lists, or gated Discord communities, using wallet-based authentication to deliver access without marketplace dependency. This preserves full royalty capture and builds stronger fan relationships.
Hybrid approaches emerge. Successful creators combine marketplace visibility for discovery with off-market sales for high-value pieces, using blockchain provenance to prove authenticity in private transactions.
Institutional adoption grows cautiously. Brands and galleries use NFTs for authenticated limited editions and provenance tracking, providing stable demand for creators who can deliver high-quality, legally cleared work.
Community-owned marketplaces begin to appear. DAOs (decentralized autonomous organizations) fund and govern alternative platforms, redistributing fees to creators and collectors rather than extracting maximum profit for shareholders.
Conclusion
In 2026, NFT and blockchain ownership claims reach new technical maturity — with better royalty enforcement, cross-chain tools, and on-chain programmability — yet centralized platform gatekeeping continues to dominate discovery, liquidity, and visibility. Creators legally and cryptographically own their assets, but marketplaces control the practical pathways to value realization.
The year will likely see incremental progress in royalty capture and creator-centric tools, particularly on alternative protocols, but the majority of economic power remains with a few large intermediaries. Risks of delisting, bypass, and metadata fragility persist, keeping most creators dependent on platform goodwill.
Still, opportunities exist for those who build direct audience relationships, use advanced on-chain features, and diversify sales channels. Beyond 2026, the most successful creators will treat blockchain as a strong provenance layer rather than a complete escape from centralized control, combining the best of decentralized ownership with strategic use of remaining centralized infrastructure. The tension between true ownership and platform gatekeeping will not disappear, but determined adaptation will allow meaningful creator empowerment within the existing constraints.
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