‘Charlie bit my finger’ sold as NFT, can disappear from YouTube forever
“Charlie bit my finger,” which was once the most viewed video on YouTube, could leave the platform forever. 3F collector music takes NFT (non-fungible tokens) from a 56 second video, which shows the baby to bite his brother’s finger and giggled, for $ 760,999.
The original protocol, which runs the auction, said in a statement the plan it was to delete the original video from YouTube and then for it “was analyzed in Blockchain.” At the time of writing, “Charlie bit my finger” still on YouTube, but not registered. It has more than 883 million views. If the clip is lowered, you might be able to watch it anywhere else if you really feel the need to live back the experience.
3F music, which also has NFT for disaster girls and girlfriends that are too attached, will have the opportunity to make a 2007 video parody with two brothers, Harry and Charlie Davies-Carr. According to the auction site, the auction winner can “recreat the funny modern rendition of classical clips” with boys who are now aged 15 and 17 years.
In 2010, “Charlie bit my finger” has made the Davies-Carr family enough money to buy a new home. In a video to mark the tenth warning of the viral hit, the father of a son, Howard Davies-Carr, said he had been told that “£ 1 million ($ 1.4 million) would be a reasonable hope of how many videos would make we. “
The figure may be higher than that now after selling it as NFT. But, depending on what 3F music must do with the video, a piece of internet history can disappear as a result.