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I recently saw the Bitcoin community in turmoil over proposal BIP-110. In fact, this is a pretty interesting dead end when observing how industry leaders react.
First, Wang Chun from F2Pool publicly criticized this proposal as completely useless, even though it’s wrapped in a child protection argument. Then Jameson Lopp from Casa also didn’t hold back, directly calling BIP-110 a reckless and unreasonable move, even predicting it would die at birth.
Meanwhile, Adam Back from Blockstream expressed concern from a different angle—he fears that this could weaken Bitcoin’s immutability and affect its store of value. Overall, BIP-110 aims to limit non-monetary data in transactions through a soft fork, basically to address the spam data issue.
But this is the dead end—when you try to solve one problem, you create another. This divide in opinions shows that the Bitcoin community is being pulled in two completely different directions. It seems we’re at an impasse regarding network improvements, where no one truly reaches consensus.
I realize this isn’t the first time Bitcoin has faced such debates, but BIP-110 seems to have touched a nerve. The community is truly at a dead end—wanting to improve but afraid of breaking what already exists. This indicates that reaching consensus in Bitcoin is becoming increasingly difficult.