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What is NFT Whitelist and How to Get Early Access to NFT Drops?
By Ruchi Sharma
In the ever-growing world of crypto, a constant evolution goes on to take care of the bumpy ride on the way forward in order to lower the risks and maximize the profits. One such aspect deals with the cryptocurrency-based scams that are infiltrating the NFT space. As such, staying up to date is the most important way to avoid both new and existing NFT scams.
The fraud angle apart, the intense competition for newly minted NFTs may cause prices to rise and transaction fees to skyrocket, rendering them unaffordable for early supporters.
To curb this, NFT providers have addressed these issues by establishing whitelists or allowlists, thus granting special privileges and access to a newly minted non fungible token.
Allowlists are used by nonfungible token projects before public minting to limit who can mint NFTs. NFTs on the whitelist can be issued without fear of gas wars.
Let’s discuss the NFT whitelisting concept and process and why NFT whitelists are used.
NFT Whitelist
A cybersecurity concept that refers to approving a list of IP addresses, email addresses, and applications while rejecting all others is known as Whitelisting. It is concerned with granting special rights and access to a specific object.
On the other hand, NFT allowlists is a list of wallet addresses with exclusive minting rights, which allows users to mint one or more NFTs often at a lower cost, before their scheduled release to the general public.
A pre-mint, which is usually done through a mint pass or an allowlist, allows community members and early backers to visit the mint before the public sale begins. The difference between a mint pass and an allowlist is that a mint pass costs money to mint a certain number of NFTs before the general sale.
How NFT whitelists work?
Early access to newly minted non fungible tokens is granted after compiling digital wallet addresses. As a prospective buyer, the first step is to have your address approved for whitelisting. Most projects want true fans and early backers to be able to access their NFTs, so they evaluate the users’ accounts before adding them to the whitelist.
Once a wallet address is added to the NFT whitelist, it is assigned a date and time for minting a new token. Each project has its own time slot length, but many allowlists provide a two-day window. Users must wait for the appointed date, after which they will be able to access their accounts at the agreed-upon time and mint an NFT.
Conclusion:
Securing a spot on an NFT project’s whitelist may provide first refusal and discounts on new NFT projects. This enables users to buy low and sell high. Furthermore, entering a whitelist should not cost anything, but it can result in significant returns, which should be worth the effort.
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