As part of a truly unusual recruitment drive, Germany’s intelligence agency, Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND), has launched an NFT collection called Dogs of BND. The initiative aims to attract tech-savvy individuals skilled in blockchain technology and NFTs to help fight cybercrime.
Inspired by the service dogs of the agency’s Pullach branch, Inka and Alex, the collection consists of 999 generative avatar images of dogs with different characteristics. This includes many standard PFP properties, such as background colors, outfits, glasses, headgear, and hairstyles.
While the collection is entirely stamped on the Ethereum blockchain, the pieces within it can only be obtained by users willing to participate in a cryptographic treasure hunt designed to encourage problem-solving skills critical to cybersecurity.
Using PFPs to find the right audience
The BND’s approach to the release has proven to be not only unconventional but also interactive, as participants must work to discover a hidden sequence of characters (an address, transaction hash, block, or token number) set as clues by the agency. This digital scavenger hunt ends when individuals dig up the right data, giving them the opportunity to strike into the NFT collection.
So far only about 200 users have managed to get their hands on a token and the hunt will continue until all 987 available tokens (some are reserved by BND) out of a total of 999 have been minted.
This revolutionary but no doubt strange campaign is already starting to gain notoriety in Web3 as it uses blockchain technology and the rising popularity of NFTs to highlight the German intelligence community as an exciting and innovative potential employer. It comes as no surprise that blockchain technology, cryptocurrency, NFTs, and other technology-related areas, including the metaverse, are areas of interest for the agency.
A sensible Web3 recruiting strategy?
BND’s drive to expand its reach to young talent fluent in these areas goes beyond just NFTs. The intelligence service is also involved to social media platforms to interact with its followers and engage potential recruits.
This is reported by the German cryptocurrency publication BTC echo, the move demonstrates BND’s commitment to adapting to the evolving digital landscape and cybersecurity needs. As BND told the outlet, “An NFT collection was an obvious new offering to our Instagram community[…] The topic of blockchain technology, associated cryptocurrency and non-fungible tokens occupy the BND in several areas.
At a time of escalating cyber threats, recruiting skilled individuals to counter such crimes is paramount. This is precisely why US federal enforcement agencies joined forces this month to create the Darknet Marketplace and the Digital Currency Crimes Task Force.
With its unique recruiting strategy, BND seeks not only to tackle crime, but also foster a forward-thinking workforce equipped with the skills to tackle the complexities of the modern digital world. The initiative has served to further demonstrate that, regardless of region, even intelligence agencies are not immune to the rapid flow of technological transformation.
Editor’s Note: This article was written by an nft now contributor in collaboration with OpenAI’s GPT-4.