"Charlie Bit My Finger" Video Sells For $760,999 As NFT | Forkast.News
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The viral "Charlie Bit My Finger" video (technically "Charlie Bit Me") has sold for $760,999 as a NFT.

One of the most-viewed viral videos of all time, it was first posted on YouTube 14 years ago and has been viewed more than 880 million times. It will be taken down from the site following the auction.

The 55-second home video, uploaded on May 23, 2007, shows a cute moment between 3-year-old Harry Davies-Carr and his 1-year-old brother, Charlie Davies-Carr, sitting in an armchair when Charlie bites Harry’s finger. “Charlie bit me,” Harry says, before putting his finger back into Charlie’s mouth. Charlie bites harder this time and Harry says: “Ouch!” repeatedly as Charlie starts to giggle. Harry then smiles and says: “Charlie bit me. And that really hurt, Charlie. And it’s still hurting.”

The popular video was recreated as an NFT — a unique, non-interchangeable digital asset whose authenticity and true ownership is tracked on a blockchain — and sold off at auction on Charliebitme.com. The winning bidder also has the opportunity to create their own version of the video featuring its original stars, Harry and Charlie.

The auction, hosted by NFT platform Origin Protocol, started on May 22 — the 14th anniversary of its upload. The video will be deleted from YouTube at the end of the auction on May 23.

But it will live on as an NFT on the blockchain.

“This video captured our collective consciousness 14 years ago, and this is our chance to get everyone talking about it for one last time before the video is deleted from YouTube forever,” said Origin Protocol co-founder Josh Fraser, in an email sent to Forkast.News.

Origin Protocol was behind American deejay and electronic dance music producer 3LAU’s auction of 33 NFTs for US$11.7 million in February.

Removing the video from YouTube gives value to the NFT by making it scarce, Fraser said in a follow-up interview with Forkast.News. He said the family behind the video had reached out to Origin Protocol after seeing the firm’s record-breaking auction with 3LAU.

“This video was one of the viral videos that really helped establish YouTube as the original platform for creators,” Fraser said. “Today, NFTs are a new technology that has the potential to be just as revolutionary for creators as YouTube was 14 years ago.”

Origin Protocol co-founder Matthew Liu, who was one of the first product managers at YouTube, told Forkast.News: “There is a bit of this bittersweet feeling around the deletion of this video, but we think it’s a very, very innovative way for the creators to make a decision as to what they want to do.

“Ultimately, I do think there’s tremendous value in having a single authenticated piece of content that everyone around the world can verify,” Liu added.

He cited the example of the Mona Lisa, noting that millions of prints and digital replicas of the Leonardo da Vinci masterpiece existed, but that the only original was in the Louvre and that it had tremendous value. He said that if all the digital copies and prints from around the world suddenly became unavailable, the original artwork would become even more valuable.

“And so this is a bit of an experiment and we’ll see exactly how this goes and what the new owner who ends up winning the auction does with this piece,” Liu said. “It could be a really interesting experience for them to showcase their NFT to the rest of the world and encourage people to go and see the video there.”

The video, which turned the two U.K. boys into internet sensations, was initially not meant to be shared publicly. Their father, Howard Davies-Carr, told Forkast.News that he had wanted to have videos of his children growing up and that the “Charlie Bit My Finger” video hadn’t been planned. He said he had happened to be filming at the moment when Charlie bit Harry, and that he had uploaded the video to YouTube for other family members to watch.

“It was definitely one of the first videos that was made available so publicly on the YouTube platform,” Davies-Carr said. “When we joined YouTube in 2007, we were one of the first people to sort of embrace the platform.

“It was fairly new and we’re having this NFT auction on the 14th anniversary of putting the video up on YouTube,” Davies-Carr said. “And to us what we’re really doing is, we’re embracing something which is coming along, something which is new, in the same way we did back then, and trying it out, seeing all that’s going on in the NFT environment.”

“We’re embracing it. It’s interesting. It’s the next thing,” Davies-Carr said.

Echoing his father’s sentiments, Charlie Davies-Carr, who is now 15, said: “It’s like the new thing, like when YouTube first started it was the new thing, and now NFT is the new thing. It’s exciting to get involved in.”
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