New Website Shows How Silly NFTs Are by Pirating Them

A growing number of right-clickers download NFTs left and right to demonstrate that owning a digital piece of art online is meaningless.

They are getting a brand new home thanks to Australian artist and programmer, Geoffrey Huntley.

Huntley created a new torrent website called The NFT Bay, an homage to The Pirate Bay, one of the biggest and oldest torrent sites, allowing users to pirate TV shows, movies, books, and games.

It is an especially pertinent topic, given the amount of media attention NFTs have been getting recently, but whether the two warring factions will ever find common ground and bury the hatchet is unlikely.

What is the token?

Huntley made 15 terabytes of NFTs available for download. A description of the site says that a NFT is just a hyperlink to an image that is usually hosted on a web 2.0 host.

As web 2.0 web hosts are known to go offline, this torrent contains all of the NFTs so that future generations can study this generation's tulip mania. It continues, 'We destroyed out planet for this!'

This is mine now.

It is an unusual standoff. On the other side are people who invest in digital art or in collections of small images. On the other side, an increasingly vocal contingent is mocking that cause.

The fact that NFT collectors are completely aware of the fact that anyone can just come along and save their art is even stranger.

Someone made a pirate bay.

Post Malone has bought an NFT while we slowly chart our descent into Hell.

Are you interested in supporting clean energy adoption? UnderstandSolar.com can show you how much money you could save by using solar power. Futurism.com may receive a small commission if you sign up through this link.