Hospitallers Hospitallers provides medical help at the very front of the front lines, currently working 24/7 to provide assistance, doctors, and supplies all around Ukraine.
The Razom Emergency Response may include, but is not limited to, the following activities: fundraising for emergency needs, partnering with organizations in Ukraine and abroad, and purchasing and delivering essential equipment and goods, just to name a few.
Project Hope is an international organization that coordinates with health-care workers to provide on-the-ground medical support to countries in crisis.
A Ukraine-based aid organization that provides psychological support to children who have witnessed war, Voices of Children uses art therapy and storytelling to support children’s well-being, and provides financial support to families who have suffered as a result of war.
An American nonprofit, Nova Ukraine works closely with Ukraine-based organizations and is currently assembling supply packages that include diapers for children and adults, baby food, hospital supplies, and dry foods for a children’s orphanage in Donetsk.
This organization uses charitable donations to put together first aid backpacks for paramedics and doctors on the front lines. In 2014, Sunflower of Peace also raised money to build the first aid backpacks for medical professionals providing aid to those fleeing the annexation of Crimea.
In addition to donating to the above organizations, if you live in a country bordering or close to Ukraine you can also reach out to the following organizations or support networks to volunteer or personally help Ukrainian refugees:
Bulgaria: Помощ за украинските бежанци
Czech Republic: Naši Ukrajinci
Hungary: Segítségnyújtás (Ukrajna)
Poland: Ukraiński Dom w Warszawie, Centrum Wielokulturowe w Krakowie
Romania: Uniți pentru Ucraina
Slovakia: Kto pomôže Ukrajine?
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post copied from the journal made by @team
Hello dear sycophants,
I keep getting these notifications and I'd like to put it here in writing that none of these were authorized by me. I do not put my artwork for sale as nft, never did and extremely unlikely that I ever will. It is fraud, and infringement of both mine (the fanartist) and the IP holder rights. I'm also putting it here so when I file another takedown notice the support who reviews my claim can see it as a proof.
If you don't know what's nft please look it up on your own, it's a whole word-vomit, just see yourself. But in this case it's just good ol' art-theft.
I highly doubt it that anyone actually purchases those, but I can't have my art being listed for sale so of course I file takedowns.
What's happening here is some cryptobro-hustlers run a bot to automatically save and list art from deviantart on opensea - an nft marketplace, it looks like this
It's very reminiscent of people stealing fan-art and selling it as prints and other stuff on ebay or aliexpress, except here you're not getting anything out of it besides "owning" a piece of art on a blockchain. Hence why I said I don't think anyone really buys it. Why the hustlers do it then? Probably for a tiny chance of someone being stupid enough to buy it, because then it's free money - it costs nothing to mint an artwork on opensea.
Buying an nft grants you nothing but a receipt that you bought it on a given blockchain - it is not a transfer of intellectual property, rights to use it or anything, you don't even get a physical copy and it's nothing like a digital art commission (tooting my own horn here but you get the extremely specific, personalized thing you want drawn). The whole scheme exists because of social engineering and artificially inflated value (wash trading) https://news.artnet.com/art-world/crypto-punk-500-million-sale-2028470
That's it, cya.