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Part of a series on NFT / Non-Fungible Token / Crypto Art. [View Related Entries]

Overview

The HitPiece Controversy refers to the backlash of musicians and DIY-indie artists against the website HitPiece in early 2022, which purported to auction music on the internet as NFTs. Many artists whose music was on HitPiece said they'd never authorized their music to appear on the platform and demanded it removed. HitPiece organizers apologized and took the site down after a day of controversy in February 2022.

Background

HitPiece appears to have been founded by music executives Rory Felton and Michael Berrin.[1] The site's Twitter account launched in July 2021[2] and entered its beta period in December 2021.[3]

The concept behind the site was an attempt to auction music as NFTs. Before the HitPiece website was taken down in early 2022, it read:[1]

"HitPiece lets fans collect NFTs of your favorite songs. Each HitPiece NFT is a One of One NFT for each unique song recording. Members build their Hitlist of their favorite songs, get on leaderboards, and receive in real life value such as access and experiences with Artists… One NFT is available for auction from each artist initially. The auction commences when the first bid is placed and lasts seven days. When the auction has been won, the NFT is minted and delivered to the winner’s custodial wallet. The next NFT from the artist becomes available. The winner of the auction reveals the next NFT from the artist. The winner receives the newly minted NFT to their custodial wallet on HitPiece.com and can show it off in their Hitlist or sell the NFT at anytime."

Prior to going viral, the site had amassed a sizable library, including music from industry giants BTS and Disney, as well as many indie artists with smaller followings.[1]

Developments

On February 1st, 2022, a large number of the musicians whose music was being auctioned on HitPiece discovered they were on the platform without their consent, angering many who expressed their thoughts online. Eve 6[4] was one of the first bands to notice that their music was on HitPiece without their consent (shown below, left). A flood of other artists soon made the same discovery and had similar reactions, including Left At London[5] (shown below, right), Louie Zong, [6] clipping[7] and many others. Others noted that the site was hosting music from major artists including The Beatles, Disney and Nintendo, leading them to assume HitPiece would soon face major lawsuits.[8]


nigh eve6 ... @Eve6 this site “hitpiece" is selling nft's of our band and MANY others without permission. if you're in a band click the link you may be on here. cease and desist m------------. nft's are fraud Jordan Reyes @bigfanofnoise · Feb 1 I don't know what this site is but it might be selling NFTS of your music - hit them the f--- up!!! We need some answers (and some takedowns). They've taken many @AmerDreams artists' music without permission!! cc: @clairerousay @thebookofeliw @TALsounds hitpiece.com Show this thread 3:56 PM · Feb 1, 2022 · Twitter for iPhone
nat "cops break laws to terrorize/intimidate" puff ... @LeftAtLondon My art is currently being sold on the blockchain by people who are not affiliated with me at all. I do not know who uploaded them to @joinhitpiece. They profit. NFT's are s--- & if you support them you're indirectly supporting the downfall of independent artistry. FOH. 4:27 PM · Feb 1, 2022 · Twitter for iPhone

In response to the controversy, HitPiece[9] took down their site around the beginning of February 2022. As of February 2nd, the homepage depicted a minimal page of text reading, "We started the conversation and we're listening" (shown below, left). They also posted an apology on Twitter[10] saying they "clearly struck a nerve," and insisted artists were paid by having their music on the platform.

HITPIECE Beta We Started The Conversation And We're Listening.

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Hitpiece music nfts showing the 404 page.

HitPiece Controversy

Part of a series on NFT / Non-Fungible Token / Crypto Art. [View Related Entries]

Updated Feb 02, 2022 at 04:58PM EST by Zach.

Added Feb 02, 2022 at 12:54PM EST by Adam.

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Overview

The HitPiece Controversy refers to the backlash of musicians and DIY-indie artists against the website HitPiece in early 2022, which purported to auction music on the internet as NFTs. Many artists whose music was on HitPiece said they'd never authorized their music to appear on the platform and demanded it removed. HitPiece organizers apologized and took the site down after a day of controversy in February 2022.

Background

HitPiece appears to have been founded by music executives Rory Felton and Michael Berrin.[1] The site's Twitter account launched in July 2021[2] and entered its beta period in December 2021.[3]

The concept behind the site was an attempt to auction music as NFTs. Before the HitPiece website was taken down in early 2022, it read:[1]

"HitPiece lets fans collect NFTs of your favorite songs. Each HitPiece NFT is a One of One NFT for each unique song recording. Members build their Hitlist of their favorite songs, get on leaderboards, and receive in real life value such as access and experiences with Artists… One NFT is available for auction from each artist initially. The auction commences when the first bid is placed and lasts seven days. When the auction has been won, the NFT is minted and delivered to the winner’s custodial wallet. The next NFT from the artist becomes available. The winner of the auction reveals the next NFT from the artist. The winner receives the newly minted NFT to their custodial wallet on HitPiece.com and can show it off in their Hitlist or sell the NFT at anytime."

Prior to going viral, the site had amassed a sizable library, including music from industry giants BTS and Disney, as well as many indie artists with smaller followings.[1]

Developments

On February 1st, 2022, a large number of the musicians whose music was being auctioned on HitPiece discovered they were on the platform without their consent, angering many who expressed their thoughts online. Eve 6[4] was one of the first bands to notice that their music was on HitPiece without their consent (shown below, left). A flood of other artists soon made the same discovery and had similar reactions, including Left At London[5] (shown below, right), Louie Zong, [6] clipping[7] and many others. Others noted that the site was hosting music from major artists including The Beatles, Disney and Nintendo, leading them to assume HitPiece would soon face major lawsuits.[8]


nigh eve6 ... @Eve6 this site “hitpiece" is selling nft's of our band and MANY others without permission. if you're in a band click the link you may be on here. cease and desist m------------. nft's are fraud Jordan Reyes @bigfanofnoise · Feb 1 I don't know what this site is but it might be selling NFTS of your music - hit them the f--- up!!! We need some answers (and some takedowns). They've taken many @AmerDreams artists' music without permission!! cc: @clairerousay @thebookofeliw @TALsounds hitpiece.com Show this thread 3:56 PM · Feb 1, 2022 · Twitter for iPhone nat "cops break laws to terrorize/intimidate" puff ... @LeftAtLondon My art is currently being sold on the blockchain by people who are not affiliated with me at all. I do not know who uploaded them to @joinhitpiece. They profit. NFT's are s--- & if you support them you're indirectly supporting the downfall of independent artistry. FOH. 4:27 PM · Feb 1, 2022 · Twitter for iPhone

In response to the controversy, HitPiece[9] took down their site around the beginning of February 2022. As of February 2nd, the homepage depicted a minimal page of text reading, "We started the conversation and we're listening" (shown below, left). They also posted an apology on Twitter[10] saying they "clearly struck a nerve," and insisted artists were paid by having their music on the platform.


HITPIECE Beta We Started The Conversation And We're Listening.

Search Interest

Unavailable.

External References

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Recent Images 5 total


Top Comments

UnKewln00b
UnKewln00b

This is my favorite part about NFT's, when someone takes art that doesn't even belong to them and try to sell it for tens of thousands of dollars worth of crypto and by my favorite part I mean it makes my blood boil and I hope only for the worst to happen to the NFT Bros trying to steal that shit.

+36
Revic
Revic

in reply to Molemanninethousand

You can create an NFT that symbolically "represents" literally anything, be it a song, a picture, a planet, the concept of the color orange, etc. It doesn't mean the buyer, or seller, actually owns the thing in question, or has any legal right to buy/sell it. Essentially all they were doing was selling the equivalent of pieces of (metaphorical) paper with the names of songs written on them.

+19

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