Bitcoin BIP-110 Proposal Reopens Fight Over Ordinals And On-Chain SpamA new Bitcoin improvement discussion is putting one of the network’s most divisive questions back in the spotlight: what should Bitcoin block space be used for? BIP-110, a proposal under developer discussion, aims to limit transaction types to payments and peer-to-peer transfers, a move that could affect inscription-heavy activity such as Ordinals and Runes.
TL;DR
- Bitcoin developers are discussing BIP-110.
- The proposal would aim to filter transaction types viewed as on-chain spam.
- Ordinals and Runes traffic sit at the center of the debate.
- BIP-110 is a proposal, not an active or scheduled hard fork.
The debate is not new. Since Ordinals brought inscription-style activity to Bitcoin, users have argued over whether that demand is a healthy fee market or a misuse of the chain. Supporters say Bitcoin is a permissionless network and users should be free to pay for block space. Critics argue that non-payment data clogs the network and moves Bitcoin away from its original monetary purpose.
The payment purist argument
The case behind BIP-110 is rooted in a simple view of Bitcoin: the network should prioritize payments and value transfer. From that perspective, transactions that carry inscription data are treated as a distraction from Bitcoin’s core function. If the network becomes too congested with non-payment traffic, regular users may face higher fees and slower confirmation times.
That argument has gained renewed attention because Ordinals and Runes reportedly account for a large share of current Bitcoin network traffic. Some estimates place inscription-related activity at more than two-thirds of traffic. Even if that figure changes over time, it explains why the issue keeps returning. Block space is scarce, and everyone using Bitcoin is competing for it.
The open block-space argument
The other side sees the proposal very differently. For Ordinals and Runes supporters, the point of Bitcoin is that users can broadcast valid transactions without asking permission. If someone pays the fee and follows consensus rules, they argue the network should not decide whether the transaction is morally or culturally acceptable.
There is also an economic argument. More activity means more fees. As Bitcoin’s block subsidy continues to decline over time, transaction fees become increasingly important for miner revenue. From that view, inscriptions may be messy, speculative, or even annoying, but they also help build the fee market that Bitcoin eventually needs.
Proposal, not policy
The most important caveat is that BIP-110 is not a scheduled hard fork and should not be reported as one. It is an active proposal and debate. Bitcoin’s development process is deliberately slow, conservative, and difficult to force through. A technical idea can create a lot of noise without ever becoming network policy.
Still, the conversation matters because it shows Bitcoin’s identity debate is far from settled. Is Bitcoin only money, or is it a settlement layer where any valid transaction can compete? BIP-110 may or may not advance, but the argument around it will continue to shape how users, miners, and developers think about the network’s future.
For readers, the next few sessions matter because Bitcoin often needs confirmation from several places at once: spot demand, exchange flows, derivatives positioning, and the broader macro mood. One signal can start the conversation, but the stronger read comes when those signals begin lining up.
This report is based on information from Bitcoin BIPs GitHub Repository.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.
read the full story
A new Bitcoin improvement discussion is putting one of the network’s most divisive questions back in the spotlight: what should Bitcoin block space be used for? BIP-110, a proposal under developer discussion, aims to limit transaction types to payments and peer-to-peer transfers, a move that could affect inscription-heavy activity such as Ordinals and Runes.
TL;DR
- Bitcoin developers are discussing BIP-110.
- The proposal would aim to filter transaction types viewed as on-chain spam.
- Ordinals and Runes traffic sit at the center of the debate.
- BIP-110 is a proposal, not an active or scheduled hard fork.
The debate is not new. Since Ordinals brought inscription-style activity to Bitcoin, users have argued over whether that demand is a healthy fee market or a misuse of the chain. Supporters say Bitcoin is a permissionless network and users should be free to pay for block space. Critics argue that non-payment data clogs the network and moves Bitcoin away from its original monetary purpose.
The payment purist argument
The case behind BIP-110 is rooted in a simple view of Bitcoin: the network should prioritize payments and value transfer. From that perspective, transactions that carry inscription data are treated as a distraction from Bitcoin’s core function. If the network becomes too congested with non-payment traffic, regular users may face higher fees and slower confirmation times.
That argument has gained renewed attention because Ordinals and Runes reportedly account for a large share of current Bitcoin network traffic. Some estimates place inscription-related activity at more than two-thirds of traffic. Even if that figure changes over time, it explains why the issue keeps returning. Block space is scarce, and everyone using Bitcoin is competing for it.
The open block-space argument
The other side sees the proposal very differently. For Ordinals and Runes supporters, the point of Bitcoin is that users can broadcast valid transactions without asking permission. If someone pays the fee and follows consensus rules, they argue the network should not decide whether the transaction is morally or culturally acceptable.
There is also an economic argument. More activity means more fees. As Bitcoin’s block subsidy continues to decline over time, transaction fees become increasingly important for miner revenue. From that view, inscriptions may be messy, speculative, or even annoying, but they also help build the fee market that Bitcoin eventually needs.
Proposal, not policy
The most important caveat is that BIP-110 is not a scheduled hard fork and should not be reported as one. It is an active proposal and debate. Bitcoin’s development process is deliberately slow, conservative, and difficult to force through. A technical idea can create a lot of noise without ever becoming network policy.
Still, the conversation matters because it shows Bitcoin’s identity debate is far from settled. Is Bitcoin only money, or is it a settlement layer where any valid transaction can compete? BIP-110 may or may not advance, but the argument around it will continue to shape how users, miners, and developers think about the network’s future.
For readers, the next few sessions matter because Bitcoin often needs confirmation from several places at once: spot demand, exchange flows, derivatives positioning, and the broader macro mood. One signal can start the conversation, but the stronger read comes when those signals begin lining up.
This report is based on information from Bitcoin BIPs GitHub Repository.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.
read the full storyThe Vanishing Bitcoin Bid: Where Are the ETF Billions Going?
HashKey's Sun argued that Bitcoin's weakness stems from capital shifting toward AI, not fading risk…
Bitcoin ETFs Hit 9-Day Outflow Streak With $223 Million Exit as June Ends in the Red
Crypto ETF flows turned broadly negative on Tuesday, June 30, with bitcoin, ether, XRP, solana and…
Bitcoin price returns to $60K as US dollar strength rejects weekly high
Bitcoin started July with a bang, rallying above $60,000 as traders predict a relief rally as the…
Bitcoin Pops Off 21-Month Low to $60K as Soft Data Eases Rate-Hike Fears
BTC recovered from local lows to $60,000 after softer U.S. jobs and factory data revived hopes the…
Kevin Warsh sidesteps rate path as Bitcoin jumps above $60K
Bitcoin has climbed back above $60,000 after Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh declined to signal…
Prediction Market World Debuts on Solana, Lets Traders Bet on Bitcoin Moves and World Cup Outcomes
World went live on Solana on Wednesday, opening a fully onchain prediction market inside the Phantom…
Crédit Agricole, World’s Largest Cooperative Bank, Launches Stablecoin EURXT
Crédit Agricole S.A. has launched a euro-backed stablecoin called EURXT and used it to settle the…
Winklevoss Twins Sell $60 Million of Bitcoin
The Winklevoss twins have made huge Bitcoin deposits into a major crypto exchange in a suspected…
Cantor says bitcoin bear market may be entering final stretch
The bank said in a note bitcoin's cycle points to a market bottom in the coming months, urging…
Winklevoss twins move $67M in Bitcoin as Arkham flags selloff signal
The Winklevoss twins have transferred about $67 million worth of Bitcoin and Ethereum to Gemini…
Bitcoin Price Prediction: BTC Risks Drop Toward $55K After $60K Breakdown
Bitcoin’s battle around the $60K region is entering a decisive phase after sellers are forcing…
Citi Cuts Bitcoin Target 27% as 2.6 Trillion SHIB Exits Exchanges
The numbers are hard to ignore. A massive 2.6 trillion SHIB tokens left exchanges as the third…
Citi Slashes Bitcoin Target to $82K
Wall Street giant Citi has slashed its 12-month Bitcoin price target to $82,000 and its Ethereum…
Bitcoin climbs toward $60,000 after Fed Chair Warsh said inflation risks has come down
The Fed chair reiterated the central bank's commitment to its 2% inflation target while signaling…
French banking giant Crédit Agricole launches EURXT euro stablecoin
Crédit Agricole’s CACEIS launches a euro-pegged stablecoin on Ethereum with 20.02 million tokens…
2.6T Shiba Inu (SHIB) Exits to On-Chain Ahead of Q3; 3-Month Trend Saves XRP at $1, Citi Slashes Bitcoin Price Target by 27% Because of AI - Morning Crypto Report
Trillions of SHIB exit exchanges after a record Q2 loss, XRP defends $1 quarterly base, and Citi…
French banking giant Crédit Agricole rolls out euro stablecoin, EURXT
EURXT debuted with 20 million tokens in circulation, backed 1:1 by euro reserves at Caceis Bank, and…
Citi slashes 12-month bitcoin, ether targets as ETF flows dry up
The bank cut its 12-month bitcoin and ether price targets after scrapping its ETF inflow forecasts,…
What's next for Bitcoin and stocks? Analysts see a volatile second half
After AI drove equities higher while bitcoin lagged, market watchers expect macro policy and market…