en
Back to the list

Should Bitcoin censor BRC-20 and Ordinals? The raging debate

source-logo  crypto.news 18 May 2023 12:48, UTC

As Bitcoin network fees increase and congestion builds, the rise of BRC-20 tokens and Ordinals NFTs has sparked a debate within the crypto community: should Bitcoin limit or even ban these new technologies? The direction this discussion takes could significantly impact the future of Bitcoin.

On March 9, 2023, Domo, an anonymous on-chain analyst, announced on Twitter a theoretical concept of BRC-20, ERC-20-like tokens on the Ordinals protocol.

An experiment into "brc-20's" and fungibility on bitcoin with ordinals 1/x pic.twitter.com/9khKLbEPk6

— domo (@domodata) March 9, 2023
Read more: Ordinals explained: New era of NFTs on Bitcoin network?

Things remained cool until early April when the number of Ordinals inscriptions skyrocketed, and Bitcoin network fees began surging exponentially. In May, the fees soared to a high of $30. This made BRC-20 tokens and Ordinals major discussion topics in the Bitcoin community. In particular, how to deal with the new technologies.

Read more: Over 225,000 bitcoin transactions are unconfirmed as Ordinals bloat mempool

Devs and maxis calling for BRC-20 and Ordinals censorship

The question is whether BTC should censor or ban those new technologies within its network. Some experts believe that the Bitcoin network should do away with BRC-20 altogether.

One of the specialists involved in the recent raging debate is Ali Sherief, a Bitcoin developer. Ali Sherief began a series of posts about the situation on Bitcoin in early May.

I am now convinced that the #brc20 spam on #bitcoin's blockchain is DDoS attack to bottleneck the network if not grind normal transaction activity down to a halt.

— Ali Sherief #Avenger (@Zenul_Abidin) May 6, 2023

Sherief made bold claims that the Bitcoin network is facing a DDoS attack to bottleneck the network. He said that BRC-20 tokens are the mode of attack on Bitcoin.

Ali Sherief’s thoughts on the Bitcoin debate | Source: Bitcoin dev Mailing list

Sherief continued his tweets, noting that anyone using the BRC-20 upgrades supports the network’s DDoS attacks. He mentioned that the BTC network is unusable because of the emergence of a “useless” class of assets. Sherief asked BTC developers to think of a possible solution.

Real people who want to use #bitcoin now can't make transactions easily because of useless bullshit clogging the network that is #brc20 thatisn't even an NFT.

Someone connect me with some Bitcoin developers so we can discuss some possible solution to this.

— Ali Sherief #Avenger (@Zenul_Abidin) May 6, 2023

Sherief argued that real BTC transactions are being priced out, and the “worthless tokens” affect Bitcoin’s normal use. In one of his briefs, he advised Bitcoin developers to stop any ordinal token mints through BIP improvements.

Interestingly, the recent improvements have triggered developments from some Bitcoin stakeholders. For instance, Luke Dashjr, a Bitcoin developer, spoke of spam filtration within the BTC network.

Dashjr’s thoughts on the Bitcoin debate | Source: Bitcoin dev Mailing list.

The developer created a spam filtration patch, Ordisrespector, to spot and reject Ordinal transactions. Dashjr also believes that actions on this should have been taken a long time ago.

According to Dashjr, the filtration of spam has been a key element of Bitcoin core since its first day. This filtration system was mistakenly omitted when implementing the recent Taproot upgrade. As such, Dahsjr believes that adding the filtration patch would solve a bug; hence is not necessarily censorship.

Eric Aronesty, a developer, also believes that changes must be made in the Bitcoin network.

Erik Aronesty’s thoughts on the Bitcoin debate | Source: Bitcoin dev Mailing list.

Sharing a similar sentiment, a decentralization advocate Chris Blec appears to support the removal of what he calls “spam on Bitcoin.” Chris noted that limiting these technologies should not be considered censorship.

I haven't heard one coherent argument yet as to how limiting spam on Bitcoin (including that which enables ordinals) equates to "censorship".

If there is one, please provide it here.

— Chris Blec (@ChrisBlec) May 9, 2023

Ryan Berckmans, Ethereum community member, said that Bitcoin Core developers intend to kill the new techs, including BRC-20 and Ordinals.

bitcoin-core devs want to kill ordinals & BRC-20s

Miners likely want to double down on ordinals & BRC-20s to increase fees and the value of private mempools

Ordinals & BRC-20 holders want the right to exist and pursue growth

Civil war https://t.co/QeoAHJpPN4

— Ryan Berckmans ryanb.eth🦇🔊 (@ryanberckmans) May 9, 2023

Let the market decide

Some stakeholders believe the ultimate removal of BRC-20 and Ordinals on the network is unnecessary.

Michael Folkson, the developer and a KOL in the Bitcoin space, wrote that the network should not make any changes to censor the technologies. Folkson believes the market should deal with the issue of BRC-20 and Ordinals. He highlighted that although people might disagree with different BTC use cases, “consensus rules are set and the rest is left to the market.”

Will BRC-20 disappear?

Some experts believe the new technologies will disappear in months. Samson Mow, the CEO of Jan3, recently said that the ongoing hype on BRC-20 technology would fade.

According to Mr. Mow, the fee issue would be among the major triggers of the disappearance of the new techs. He mentioned that the fees served to miners could not be sustained in the long term.

Mow believes that Bitcoin’s mass adoption relies on two use cases, a means of exchange and a saving tech. In his opinion, the NFT/JPEGs application is not a good means to foster adoption.

Ordinals may cause another BTC fork

Another interesting discussion arising from the recent Bitcoin issues is the calls for reform on Bitcoin’s block size. This means increasing the storage size from 1MB to higher heights.

Taproot opened the door just enough to new functionality which puts massive new demand on Bitcoin block space

BUT Bitcoin will never accept a hard fork to increase block size to scale this, nor one to improve programmability at L1 to allow for real rollups / L2s

so wat to do?

— DCinvestor (@iamDCinvestor) May 10, 2023

A crypto enthusiast called Crypto Texan highlighted the heated discussion within the Bitcoin community.

i think we might see a block size wars style bitcoin fork

thing are getting HEATED in the Bitcoin ecosystem

it’s inefficient for transactions, NFTs, BRC20s

history repeating itself

— Crypto Texan | Polygon Labs 🦇🔊💜 (@Crypto_Texan) May 9, 2023

Crypto Texan said that this is merely a repeat of Bitcoin’s history. Some note that this could be a war between Bitcoin maxis and devs.

Many investors believe reforming the block size would mean the Bitcoin block could support even more transactions. These reforms could help cater to the recently increased load on the network.

Imagine thinking that Bitcoin is so special, but a fork of it, running a completely different hashing algorithm with non-competing mining hardware wouldn't be special like it. #Litecoin

— Shan Belew Ⓜ️🕸 (@MASTERBTCLTC) May 16, 2023

For instance, if Bitcoin doubles the block size from 1MB to 2MB, each block can handle double the number of currently held transactions. If the block size increases, the blocks will store more transactions.

🧵 1/6

A brief history of the #bitcoin fork wars:

The Bitcoin Fork Wars began in 2017 when the Bitcoin community split into two factions: Bitcoin Core and Bitcoin Cash.

The primary reason for this division was a debate over the block size limit. pic.twitter.com/ZobMxLd2E2

— David Black (@DavidWentNomad) May 5, 2023

Most believers in block size reforms are Bitcoin maxis, miners, and large crypto networks. Other enthusiasts note that enlarging Bitcoin’s block size would make the network highly centralized. Only top mining companies would have enough power to deal with those massive blocks.

Interestingly, the debate on increasing Bitcoin’s block size has already been discussed in the past.

The debate came to a head in 2017, when a group of miners and Bitcoin companies pushed for a hard fork to increase the block size to 2MB

This resulted in the creation of Bitcoin Cash, which now operates with an 8MB block size

7🧵

— Crypto-Kingpin.eth (@christopherwd5) May 16, 2023

In 2017, the Bitcoin network passed a plan to reform the block size to handle more transactions and reduce transaction fees. However, the community largely disputed these reforms, all stuck with the original Bitcoin chain. The forked blockchain today is known as Bitcoin Cash, which now has an 8MB block size.

Improving the BRC-20 tokens?

Could Bitcoin maxis choose to implement forks that target improving the tokens? A developer John W Ratcliff recently noted that Bitcoin’s JSON format makes the network inefficient. Instead, the network could improve to use binary formats. He said the binary format would reduce BRC-20 size from about 90 to 19 bytes.

I hope someone can correct me if I'm wrong..but…it appears to me that whoever is minting these BRC-20 tokens on the bitcoin network is paying millions of dollars in additional and unnecessary fees simply because the programmer who created this 'standard' wasn't willing to spend…

— John W. Ratcliff (@jratcliff) May 8, 2023

When creating the BRC-20 technologies, Domo anticipated that there would be improvements and optimizations with time. One of the possible solutions could be TARO (Taproot Asset Representation Overlay), created by Lightning Labs. The protocol would allow people to issue assets on Bitcoin, but they will be immediately transferred to the lightning network. Other scaling solutions for the Bitcoin network include ZK-rollups, which process transactions by bundling them off-chain before validation.

In a heated debate around the BRC-20 tokens and Ordinals, the crypto community is considering various solutions, yet the future course for Bitcoin remains unpredictable.

crypto.news