When you come to Fracton Protocol, you can join the open fundraising, which is the first step of the fractional process of the target NFT. After receiving your People’s NFTs (i.e., the ERC-1155 fractions), you can swap them for smaller pieces of ownership — the $FFTs (i.e., the ERC-20 tokens) — at a 1:1000 ratio.
If the fundraising round succeeds, Fracton Protocol will acquire the targeted NFT and deposit it into the treasury. Then, the fractions owners are allowed to redeem any NFTs with enough People’s NFTs instantly.
If the fundraising round fails, Fracton will use the funds raised to repurchase the accrued $FFT released in this round, ensuring the exchange rate is valid.
Meanwhile, fractions owners can trade $FFTs in DEX and cooperative CEX, seeking arbitrage opportunities.

Fracton Protocol is a fractionalization trading platform for blue-chip NFTs. It enables efficient price discovery and equity distribution of NFTs by allowing users to buy, own, and trade fractionalized tokens in ERC-20 and ERC-1155 standards.
The Udmurts are a Permian (Finnic) ethnic group in Eastern Europe, who speak the Udmurt language. In the course of history, Russian-speakers have referred to them as Chud Otyatskaya, Otyaks, Wotyaks or Votyaks.
Most Udmurt people live in Udmurtia. Small groups live in the neighboring areas of Kirov Oblast and Perm Krai of Russia, Bashkortostan, Tatarstan, and Mari El.
The Udmurt population is shrinking; the Russian Census reported 552,299 in 2010, down from the 2002 Russian census figure of 637,000, in turn down from 746,562 in 1989.
ethnic group in Eastern Europe
The Udmurts are a Permian (Finnic) ethnic group in Eastern Europe, who speak the Udmurt language. In the course of history, Russian-speakers have referred to them as Chud Otyatskaya, Otyaks, Wotyaks or Votyaks
Karabakh (Azerbaijani: Qarabağ [ɡɑˈɾɑbɑɣ]; Armepresent-day southwestern Azerbaijan extending from the highlands of the Lesser Caucasus down to the lowlands between the rivers Kura and Aras. The Russian name Karabakh, which is generally believed to be a compound of the Turkic word kara (black) and the Iranian word bagh (garden), literally meaning "black garden."
Karabakh (Azerbaijani: Qarabağ [ɡɑˈɾɑbɑɣ]; Armepresent-day southwestern Azerbaijan extending from the highlands of the Lesser Caucasus down to the lowlands between the rivers Kura and Aras.