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submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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SuccessGreat! Check your inbox and click the link.ErrorPlease enter a valid email address. NFTs That Cost Millions Replaced With Error Message After Project Downgraded to Free Cloudflare Plan

On Friday, thousands of NFTs that had once sold collectively for millions of dollars vanished from the internet and were replaced with the phrase “This content has been restricted. Using Cloudflare’s basic service in this manner is a violation of the Terms of Service.” The pictures eventually returned but their brief loss, as a result of one of the services that served the NFTs being migrated to a free account, is a reminder of the ephemeral nature of digital goods as well as the craze for crypto-backed pictures that dominated the internet for a few years.

The pictures were part of a CloneX RTFKT (pronounced “artifact”) collection, a Nike-backed NFT project done in collaboration with Japanese artist Takashi Murakami. They disappeared because the corporate overlord that acquired them was no longer investing the time or capital into the project it once had.

At around 5 a.m. EST on the morning of April 24, more than 19,000 NFTs in the CloneX RTFKT (pronounced “artifact”) collection vanished. In their place was white text on a black background that said: “This content has been restricted. Using Cloudflare’s basic service in this manner is a violation of the Terms of Service.”


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[-] [email protected] 13 points 1 month ago

This is quite funny

[-] [email protected] 8 points 1 month ago

is a reminder of the ephemeral nature of digital goods

If it's ephemeral, its literally not a good NFT.

Properly implemented NFTs will only die out if the entire blockchain running them shits the bed and people no longer can agree on what is the "real" blockchain for that system.

IE if somehow years from now Ethereum is never used, most people forgot about it, and theres multiple copies of the ethereum blockchain in existence that refute each other (basically bogus copies of the entire chain), and no one can remember or agree on which one is the real one.

Then would a properly implemented NFT become "lost"

If something as simple as a cloudflare account is all it takes for your "NFT"s to disappear, then they were never a well implemented NFT in the first place and should have never been trusted.

[-] [email protected] 6 points 1 month ago

Lol.

OTOH, given that the NFT wasn’t the actual freely downloadable JPEG but a record in an inefficient database that one is truly the owner* of said JPEG, not being able to download the image from Cloudflare is arguably not in any way a shortcoming of the system. The database still says you own your shitty monkey drawing or whatever it is. If you didn’t have the foresight to right-click on it and save a copy, maybe ask someone who did?

[-] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago

This.

As much as I hate the overall concept of NFT backed images (people who call the image itself an NFT are out of touch with what an NFT is), the core principle of them was your ownership was literally baked into the very much not ephemeral blockchain db.

All you have to do is produce your copy of the file and demonstrate the SHA256 hash or whatever of that image matches the one in the DB, and you can "prove" ownership. Forever.

Which shouldnt actually matter to anyone, but it is a pretty neat tech demo, but not a super useful use case. It's annoying that of all things that is what we now associate with NFTs, and not something actually useful like, I dunno, royalties on digital properties like music or whatever.

[-] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago

NFTs might be the stupidest use of crypto.

and memecoins too, but at least its sorta amusing how something like dogecoin has a higher market cap than something like monero

[-] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago

RTFKT (pronounced “artifact”)

Not anymore

this post was submitted on 28 Apr 2025
56 points (100.0% liked)

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