Five students from the University of The Bahamas have won $10,000 each for their digital music and art creations as part of the university's NFT Digital Arts Project, sponsored by Cordell Broadus, the son of rapper Snoop Dogg. The project, funded by the Champ Medici Arts Fund Scholarship Award and the Tezos Foundation, aims to support emerging musicians and artists by enabling them to create and sell NFT works on the Tezos blockchain. The initiative also includes providing educational tutorials and equipment to the university to support future digital art and music initiatives.
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