Written by: Oluwapelumi Adejumo
Compiled by: Saoirse, Foresight News
Core Summary
- Bitcoin's block height is approaching 961632, at which point the BIP-110 proposal may restrict non-financial data within transactions.
- Proponents claim this adjustment will allow Bitcoin to refocus on its core function of settlement, alleviating network strain caused by inscriptions and other applications consuming significant on-chain data.
- Critics warn that the proposal's miner voting threshold is too low and lacks an accompanying enforcement mechanism, potentially leading to a mainnet split and forcing major exchanges and node operators into defensive measures.
Bitcoin is approaching a critical juncture where a long-standing ideological divide may escalate into the network's most severe governance conflict in years. At the heart of this dispute is Bitcoin Improvement Proposal (BIP) 110, which aims to limit the total amount of non-financial data that can be embedded in Bitcoin transactions. With the network just under 10,000 blocks away from the mandatory activation window at block height 961632, what began as a technical disagreement over network "spam transactions" has transformed into a high-stakes confrontation.
Supporters of BIP-110 view this restriction as crucial for preserving Bitcoin's core value as a monetary settlement layer. Opponents warn that such an aggressive implementation risks fracturing the entire ecosystem, potentially freezing user assets in transit and eroding market trust in the neutrality of the Bitcoin protocol.
Although the proposal currently lacks the widespread miner and institutional backing typically required for major protocol changes, this imminent flashpoint will serve as a significant stress test for Bitcoin's decentralized power structure. The proposal pits network developers and node operators against miners and market makers—the core groups that ultimately determine the economic value trajectory of the entire blockchain.
A Battle Over What Bitcoin Should Carry
BIP-110 plans to temporarily restrict arbitrary data storage on the Bitcoin blockchain by adding a new consensus rule to the transaction structure. In simple terms, nodes running the proposal's code would treat transactions carrying large amounts of data as invalid. The proposal targets applications such as ordinal inscriptions, runes, and other activities that directly inscribe text, images, or token data onto Bitcoin's base layer.
While these applications have attracted new users and increased miner fee revenue, they have also drawn criticism from Bitcoin purists who argue that the blockchain should not be used as a permanent storage medium.
Proponents frame the change as an effort to safeguard Bitcoin's core functionality. They argue that non-financial data excessively consumes block space, burdens node operations, and deviates from Bitcoin's fundamental purpose as sound money. In their view, filtering high-capacity data payloads is not censorship of payments but a restoration of rule-based boundaries to refocus the network on its original purpose.
This perspective has gained support among some node operators and Bitcoin users who have long resisted the inscription craze. To them, the upcoming activation window proves that when users perceive Bitcoin's rules drifting from their original intent, the node operators responsible for validating the chain still have the power to check miners and commercial entities.
Bitcoin analyst Luis Marcano, a supporter of the proposal, suggests that the actual scenario post-BIP-110 activation might not be as dire as critics predict. His view is that nodes running the new rules will reject blocks filled with irrelevant data, and mining power will gradually shift to the blockchain with stronger economic value that adheres to the new rules.
Some supporters take an even harder line, portraying opponents as a small group of social media influencers, token investors, and businesses profiting from on-chain data ventures. They claim that thousands of node operators are already prepared to enforce the new rules, and miners will not tolerate the negative impacts of prolonged network uncertainty.
However, the market does not share this optimistic assessment.
Critics Warn: Implementation Mechanism Significantly Increases Conflict Risk
The sharpest conflict over BIP-110 centers on its implementation design. Previous large-scale protocol upgrades required near-unanimous consensus among the miners securing the network to activate. BIP-110 completely changes this model: it sets a miner signaling threshold of only 55% and pairs it with a highly controversial enforcement fallback mechanism.
Even if miners fail to meet the minimum voting threshold, proponents of the proposal code still plan for nodes to unilaterally reject all blocks that do not comply with the new rules. This aggressive architecture transforms what was a technical disagreement over block space allocation into a fundamental governance crisis.
Blockstream CEO Adam Back has outright rejected the proposal, citing serious technical flaws. He warns that forcing code changes without achieving economic consensus will almost certainly result in a forked chain with very little adoption.
Adam Back also explicitly opposes proponents comparing this proposal to the 2017 Segregated Witness (SegWit) upgrade. He notes that while SegWit was contentious before implementation, it ultimately achieved broad consensus among developers, miners, and various infrastructure providers—a foundation BIP-110 currently completely lacks.
Veteran Bitcoin developer and security lead Jameson Lopp calls the proposal a dangerous overreach disguised as governance over spam transactions.
Beyond the immediate risk of a chain split, Jameson Lopp warns that the code could break some niche wallet functionalities, indirectly rendering user assets inoperable. Furthermore, he argues the restriction is a band-aid solution: determined users will simply find other transaction fields to hide irrelevant data. Ultimately, Bitcoin would bear all the systemic risks of a contentious hard fork without eradicating the behavior the proposal aims to curb.
Yet the most fundamental divide tearing at the industry's fabric remains ideological. Bitcoin's core value proposition rests on absolute neutrality: as long as a sender pays the market rate for fees, the network processes any compliant transaction.
Critics warn that modifying consensus rules to actively punish "unwanted" on-chain behavior sets an extremely dangerous precedent. If the protocol can be changed today to filter inscription data, future factions or national regulators could use the same logic to demand the network block privacy-enhancing coin mixing transactions, gambling payments, or transfers containing politically sensitive information.
Proponents dismiss this "slippery slope" concern, arguing the network has historically distinguished between purely monetary use and abuse of on-chain storage. They emphasize that BIP-110 is a precise tweak, with the code explicitly setting an automatic expiration date of approximately one year.
However, this "temporary adjustment" explanation has done little to placate the opposition.
Bitcoin Core developers like Jameson Lopp argue that a rule change lasting only one year could cause more disruption than a permanent one. Various enterprise wallets, cryptographic libraries, and smart contract protocols would need to build and maintain two sets of infrastructure adapted to different rules.
More critically, Bitcoin as a settlement network relies heavily on stable, predictable rules. A one-year temporary change introduces significant long-term uncertainty. Developers cannot predict whether the restriction will simply expire, be extended, or replaced with stricter control rules.
Market May Downplay BIP-110 Impact Unless Exchanges Forced into Contingency Measures
Despite escalating rhetoric between core developers and node operators, market analysts generally believe the activation point in early August will not trigger a catastrophic network split.
In commentary provided to CryptoSlate, Bitfinex analysts stated that the entire BIP-110 situation looks more like a "governance stress test" than a genuine crisis likely to cause a chain split.
This pragmatic judgment stems from the clear lack of economic consensus: nodes actively running the restrictive rules currently number in the single-digit percentages, all major mining pools are taking a wait-and-see approach, and there are no signs of the broader crypto industry urgently adjusting supporting systems to differentiate between two potential chains.
All indicators suggest the proposal will most likely fail to activate; at worst, it would only spawn a niche forked chain with minimal liquidity and recognition.
The crypto market has established patterns for resolving such disputes. Following the contentious 2017 fork that gave rise to Bitcoin Cash, liquidity, exchange support, and user activity quickly consolidated on the main chain that retained the original economic scale and the BTC ticker.
Furthermore, the maturation of Bitcoin's market structure in recent years provides a buffer against panic from protocol disputes. Unlike past cycles dominated by retail investors, the core forces influencing price action today are sustained spot ETF inflows, professional derivatives positioning, and institutional allocation. In this mature market environment, a route dispute among a subset of developers is unlikely to trigger a long-term fundamental revaluation of the asset.
The real tail risk lies with market infrastructure. If a contingent of nodes adhering to the new rules persistently supports a niche forked chain during the activation window, centralized exchanges and custodians would be forced to initiate defensive contingency plans.
To guard against replay attacks, ensure sufficient fund liquidity, and assess the overall stability of both chains, major trading platforms would likely temporarily suspend Bitcoin on-chain deposits and withdrawals.
While such operations are familiar to crypto industry veterans, many new investors from traditional finance are unaccustomed to operational disruptions caused by decentralized consensus conflicts, which could easily trigger market sentiment swings.
In summary, BIP-110 currently lacks sufficient industry-wide economic backing to shake the position of the existing main chain. However, in the lead-up to block height 961632, the market is destined to experience short-term volatility driven by related news, see a surge in hedging orders in derivatives markets, and witness the entire industry's custodial infrastructure undergo a critical stress test.









