Op-ed: Bitcoin community must not allow let Ordinals debate cause division

Share This Post

The following is a guest post by Kadan Stadelmann, CTO at Komodo Blockchain.

A great debate on Bitcoin Ordinals, essentially NFTs on the Bitcoin blockchain, has broken out. One side of the debate believes there is no place for Ordinals on the Bitcoin blockchain. The other side believes ordinals are the perfect innovation for the first blockchain. 

Either way, the debate is now reaching fever pitch. Bitcoin core developers are looking to introduce an update that would make the minting of future Ordinals impossible. Bitcoin Ordinal proponents are protesting the change but don’t call the shots. 

BRC-20, the fungible token standard that makes ordinals possible, supports creating and transferring fungible tokens in the ordinals protocol. Furthermore, Ordinal inscriptions use the Bitcoin unspent transaction output (UTXO) sets. Thus, Ordinals increase output demand and the size of the UTXO set. 

BRC-20 is similar to Counterparty, which provided a way to create NFTs involving links pointing to images, but those links today are all broken after IMGUR made it a policy that their service cannot be used for NFTs. Therefore, Ordinals proponents argue that they want to put the data and images onchain to avoid such issues in the future. 

Ironically, Segregated WItness and Taproot made Ordinal inscriptions possible on the Bitcoin blockchain. The present-day anti-Ordinals crowd made Ordinals on Bitcoin possible with past Bitcoin design decisions.

The Ordinals crowd did not change the consensus rules of Bitcoin. SegWit and Taproot made Ordinals possible. Therefore, Ordinals proponents argue that the network already allows such functionality. Pay the fee, post the data—no matter what the data—onto the Bitcoin blockchain. 

Segregated Witness (SegWit) altered the transaction format of Bitcoin to defend against transaction malleability while decreasing transaction times by increasing block capacity and speeding up validations by storing more transactions in a single block. 

Taproot offers a new way to perform Bitcoin transactions by enhancing privacy and flexibility for users. It also activates Merklized Alternative Script Trees (MAST), which condense complex Bitcoin transactions into a single hash, reducing transaction fees, minimizing memory usage and improving Bitcoin’s scalability.

Detractors view Ordinals as an attack on Bitcoin, undermining Bitcoin’s strength as digital gold and adding unnecessary risk and scams to the blockchain. Ordinal detractors think that people want to use Bitcoin to skirt issues of our day, such as financial censorship, which might get priced out of the blockchain as increasing numbers of NFT images are added to the Bitcoin blockchain. 

Proponents argue that Ordinals are meeting market demand, as evidenced by people paying for the ordinals. In addition, they argue that Bitcoin Ordinals pushes the boundaries of Bitcoin, making it stronger. Ordinals are a way to battle test Bitcoin to develop mitigation strategies for various threats rather than have that risk latent in the protocol for when mass adoption comes to fruition. In short, Ordinals are pushing the acceleration of the Bitcoin protocol. 

For instance, Ordinals have proven a fee structure would incentivize miners to keep mining without needing to introduce subsidies or inflation into the system once the last Bitcoin has been mined in approximately 140 years. Simply put, Ordinals are presented as innovation. 

With the debate now raging, all parties need to take a deep breath and do their best not to create a divisive environment in Bitcoin. For those on the outside looking in, Bitcoin’s future looks uncertain with such animosity inside the industry. At the same time, some of the biggest players in Wall Street are moving into the Bitcoin market. Some remain suspicious of their motives. 

The entire industry would be better off uniting behind the original principles of Bitcoin while working on differences quietly rather than squabbling at one of Bitcoin’s biggest turning points in its history.

The post Op-ed: Bitcoin community must not allow let Ordinals debate cause division appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

Former Monero Developer Launches New Crypto Mining App

Riccardo “Fluffypony” Spagni, a former Monero developer, has launched a new mining app called Tari Universe The app aims to make mining accessible to everyone using a user-friendly

BONK Bulls Take Over: Upside Momentum Builds After Pullback

After a brief pullback, BONK is showing signs of renewed strength as bullish momentum begins to build The recent price action indicates that bulls have regained control, pushing the token out of its

Hamster Kombat Takes Season 1 Snapshot, Reveals Post-Airdrop Direction

Amidst generalized complaints from users who suffered token slashes for being labeled as cheaters, Hamster Kombat has announced that it has taken a snapshot for its season 1 With this move, the

Bitcoin Volatility Still Low Compared To Past Cycle: Is BTC Ready To Hit ATH In 2024?

Bitcoin has surged over the past few days, sparking a shift in market sentiment as investors take notice of its renewed momentum  Despite the recent price gains, key data from Coinglass reveals that

The 5 Month Halving Hangover: Bitcoin Miners Continue to Face Revenue Struggles 

Metrics reveal that although BTC prices climbed 697% in September, Bitcoin’s hashprice—the anticipated daily revenue from 1 petahash per second (PH/s)—remains ultra-low This

Analyst Who Predicted The Bitcoin Rally Reveals Time To Sell

Bitcoin has performed well in the past few days after experiencing a strong downturn in the first two weeks of September This rally kickstarted in the middle of this week after the Fed decided to