Dear Arian,
Apologies for taking a while to reply! First of all: nice modelling!
Cool that you have made use of some new object properties added in
RiC-O 1.1, such as 'hasContentWhichRepresents' :-)!
As far as I understand, the idea of considering the copies of the
portraits as SFTs would be that, at least at the moment of making the
copy, and still today as you carry out your modelling, the copies are
fungible: it doesn't which copy one buys, one could swap a copy with
any other, and it wouldn't make any difference. However, after a copy
is bought and some time has passed, it acquires its own history and
value in itself, and it may then be considered non-fungible.
At the level of the previous paragraph, I think the story would
generalise reasonably well to the situation of making copies of (an
Instantiation of) any Record. At the moment one makes a copy, I agree
with you that it can make sense to consider it simply a new
Instantiation (one might also, of course, include the relation
'isOrWasDerivedFromInstantiation' to express the relationship to the
original Instantiation which was copied). But as time passes, the ways
in which that copy is used (perhaps it is annotated, or perhaps it is
taken into an important meeting and displayed on a screen there, or
many other things...) may lead to it being considered (an
Instantiation of) a Record in its own right.
That RiC embraces and is able to express the fact that context is very
dynamic, specifically that ontological judgements may not be the same
at different points in time, is one of its novelties :-).
In particular, I agree with you that at the present point in time, it
could make sense as you do to model the copies of the portraits as
Instantiations of the original Record (painting). Later on, the copies
might well be considered Records, this being foreseen in the idea of
considering them SFTs (i.e. they might become non-fungible); in that
case, relations like 'hasCopy' obviously become relevant.
There is a separate question here, though, which I touched upon in my
earlier reply, to do with whether we distinguish the NFT/SFTs from the
actual paintings/copies. As above, I think your modelling makes sense
if we kind of ignore the NFT/SFT aspect, and just think in terms of
painting and copies, i.e. we equate the NFT and SFTs with the actual
painting and copies respectively. I do think that this could be
potentially confusing, though. If one does take this perspective, I
think I myself would at least use rico:Proxy for the NFT, to
distinguish it from the actual painting which the State Archives hold.
A different perspective, which was the one I had in mind in my first
reply, is to consider the SFTs records of ownership of a copy of the
original painting. In such a model, one need not have an NFT
explicitly involved in the modelling at all, and instead simply regard
the SFTs as instantiations of the original Record (painting), which
again might later become Records (and be regarded as NFTs) in their
own right.
If one does wish to have an NFT explicitly involved to kind of
'represent the painting in the metaverse', then I agree that it could
make sense to consider it a Record, but I would be very clear then to
include 'rico:isCopyOf' to point back to the original painting, and,
to try to make clear what is going on, probably include either some
Activity (like 'copying into the metaverse'), or at least some
free-text description in rico:history or rico:scopeAndContent or
similar to express the same. But one could also consider the NFT at
this point in time simply as an Instantiation of the original painting
(the SFTs being derived from it by copying). Or again, which was the
kind of thing I had in mind in my first reply, one could consider the
NFT a record of the ownership of the painting in the metaverse (or in
principle of the actual painting), but then, as I wrote originally, I
feel it would not make sense to consider the SFTs (if regarded as
records of ownership of the copies) to be derived from the NFT by
copying.
In summary, I think your modelling certainly can be regarded as very
accurate at this point in time if the NFT is regarded as a Record
'representing a painting in the metaverse' and the SFTs are regarded
as copies of that metaverse incarnation of the painting; but if it
were for me, I'd then try in addition to make very clear, in one of
the ways I suggested, the relationship between the NFT and the
original :-). But at the same time, I feel that there are a number of
other possible perspectives and modelling options, which others might
choose if looking at the same kind of example!
Thanks again for the thought-provoking example and nice modelling!
Best wishes,
Richard
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