The first message ever fired off at Twitter sold on Monday for $2.9 million(JSh 318 million) when its sender Jack Dorsey accepted the winning bid for the collectible as a “non fungible token” or NFT at an auction. A tweet from Cent auction platform read: “Jack accepted the offer from sinaEstavi for $2,915,835.47,this tweet is now minted on the blockchain.” Who had bought it? The profile on the auction-winning account indicated it belonged to Sina Estavi, chief executive of blockchain technology-related startup Bridge Oracle. A copy of Dorsey’s inaugural tweet and a history of the bidding was posted at the v.cent.co website.Dorsey’s tweet highlighted a surge of interest around NFTs, or non-fungible tokens. NFTs use the same blockchain technology behind cryptocurrencies to turn anything from art to sports trading cards into virtual collector’s items that cannot be duplicated. Dorsey’s first message. Fifteen years ago Dorsey typed out a banal message — “just setting up my twttr” — which became the first ever tweet, launching a global platform that has become a controversial and dominant force in civil society. The short tweet was sent March 21, 2006 by the Twitter co-founder and chief, who said he would donate the money from its sale to charity. Estavi wrote on Twitter: “I think years later people will realize the true value of this tweet, like the Mona Lisa painting,” Dorsey on Monday tweeted thanks to @sinaEstavi, along with a message indicating the proceeds were sent to Give Directly nonprofit in East Africa that helps people living in poverty. Estavi responded in tweet from @sinaEstavi: “Hey @jack , thank you for accepting my offer, and I’m glad this money is being donated to charity,”