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加密货币新闻

Bitcoin Developers Clash Over Proposal to Relax Long-Standing Limits on the Size of Data Held

2025/04/30 17:17

Bitcoin Developers Clash Over Proposal to Relax Long-Standing Limits on the Size of Data Held

Bitcoin (BTC) developers are again at odds over how the world’s oldest and largest blockchain should handle storing information on-chain, with a proposal to relax long-standing limits on the size of data held sparking fierce debate reminiscent of 2023's battles over Ordinals.

The blockchain's OP_RETURN feature allows people to attach a small piece of extra data to a transaction, often used for things like notes, timestamps or digital records. The proposed change, put forward by developer Peter Todd, would remove the 80-byte cap on such data, a limit originally designed to discourage spam and preserve the blockchain’s financial integrity.

It is often used for things like notes, timestamps or digital records. The proposed change, put forward by developer Peter Todd, would remove the 80-byte cap on such data—a limit originally designed to discourage spam and preserve the blockchain’s financial integrity.

Supporters argue the current limit is pointless because users are already bypassing it by using Taproot transactions, to hide data inside parts of the transaction meant for cryptographic signatures. This is how Ordinals and Inscriptions work (and why they have their critics): They embed images or text into Taproot transactions that are often unspendable, turning the Bitcoin blockchain into a kind of data storage system.

Bitcoin Core developer Luke Dashjr, a vocal critic of Ordinals, which he has long labeled a “spam attack” on the blockchain, called the proposal “utter insanity” and warned that loosening data restrictions would accelerate what he sees as the degradation of Bitcoin’s financial-first purpose.

“It should be needless to say, but this idea is utter insanity,” Dashjr posted. “The bugs should be fixed, not the abuse embraced.”

Critics of the proposal also have another concern. The change could normalize illegal content storage, degrade the chain’s fungibility, and turn node operators into unwitting hosts of malware and copyright violations.

To demonstrate the potential maelstrom this may bring, one Ordinals team inscribed a whole Nintendo 64 emulator onto the blockchain, which may get the attention of Nintendo, a company known for being protective of its intellectual property.

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