In what may be one of the better pieces of performance art this year, Australian Geoffrey Huntley hascreated a websitethat promises to let you torrent an entire blockchainâs worth of NFTs. Itâs called, appropriately, The NFT Bay, and itâs an almost exact replica of the famous pirating site (with an added cheekyDMCA takedownlink). As a site, it seems to do what it says on the tin, but as a statement it could spark an interesting discussion around what it means if you claim ownership over something on the internet.
Pretty much every link on the site (except for the one thatâs a Rick Roll) will eventually lead you tothe description page, which would look right at home on the real Pirate Bay (according to my friend, who is definitely not me because Iâve never pirated anything). At the bottom is an actual download link â clicking on it will get you the torrent, letting you download a file called âpreview.jpgâ which shows off a bunch of Bored Ape images, as well as zip files that supposedly contain all the NFTs from the Ethereum and Solana blockchains. All told, the download is just under 20TB. That is, to put it mildly, alotof image files.
A familiar argument is playing out in the replies toHuntleyâs announcement tweetâ NFT haters point to it as a triumph that proves NFTs have no value, and crypto fans try to prove how unbothered they are by replying in droves that itâs actually the proof of ownership, not the image, that gives NFTs their value. Thinking that youâre getting the same thing by saving the JPEG is a right-click mindset, as they say.
I mean, good art is supposed to spark discussion, right?
For his part, Huntley explains that part of his reasoning for making it was the fact that NFTs very oftendonât store any mediaon the blockchain, instead just linking to a version stored on a potentially fragile web server. He also gives a much more in-depth explanation behind the influences for The NFT Bay inan FAQ on his GitHubandin an excellent interview withMotherboard.
What I enjoy most about The NFT Bay, though, is that it both takes NFT-boosters at their word and pokes fun at the concept. âYou want to claim ownership over something,â it asks. âOn the internet, that means someoneâs going to pirate it.â And Huntleyâs announcement message of âOMG WHO RIGHT CLICKED ALL OF THE #NFTs?â takes the âyou wouldnât download a JPEGâ meme (shared by both supporters and critics alike) and says âbet.â
But there remains an obvious question:does it actually contain every NFT on the Ethereum blockchain? Regrettably, I donât have an answer for you â trying to download the nearly 15TB zip file would put meso far over my data capthat Comcast would probably break down my door with a battering ram. However, others have shown that it is possible to download all the NFTs, so Huntley isnât promising the impossible here (basically, your program would just have to find all the tokens on the blockchain and use the links they contain to download the media). Would it impact the artistic statement if someone finally finishes downloading it and discovers it doesnât contain all the JPEGs? Thatâs probably something youâll have to decide for yourself.
Unfortunately, it seems like you would have to go through the download process to experience the collection â as far as I can tell, the NFT Bayâs search function just returns the same results no matter what you put in it, despite the tantalizing checkboxes promising to let you see only CryptoPunks or Bored Ape Yacht Club images.
I guess thatâs what happens when youâre relying on outdated, centralized, Web 2.0 tech to distribute your stolen NFTs. Thatâs why Iâll be waiting for the web3 version of LimeWire to build my right-click collection.