Chinese video site Bilibili follows Alibaba and Tencent in issuing NFTs as ‘digital collectibles’
- The winners of the Bilibili lucky draw can make and sell physical products based on their pigeon image, and create digital works for non-commercial purposes
- In China, NFTs are branded as ‘digital collectibles’ to avoid regulatory scrutiny, and the assets cannot involve cryptocurrency
Video platform Bilibili is the latest Chinese tech firm to jump on the non-fungible token (NFT) bandwagon, launching its own set of digital collectibles, following in the footsteps of Alibaba Group Holding and Tencent Holdings.
Bilibili has been accepting sign-ups through Friday this week for a lucky draw to win one of 2,233 profile pictures featuring a cartoon pigeon, each with a unique design and code stored on the company’s own blockchain network, UPowerchain.
The draw is open to Bilibili users aged 14 and above who are level-6 users, the highest engagement level on the platform. They must also have been active on the site on a daily basis throughout 2021.
The winners will be able to make and sell physical products based on their pigeon image, and create digital works for non-commercial purposes. The company added that it would soon roll out a feature allowing NFT holders to transfer the digital asset to other people for free.
“We do not encourage any form of hype on digital art avatars,” Bilibili said.
Bilibili did not explain why it chose a pigeon for the NFT series, but the term “release the pigeon” is often seen in user comments on the site when a Bilibili creator is tardy about posting new videos. The term is also a Chinese idiom for failing to keep a date, or standing someone up.