Controversial Protocol-NFTs Inscribed into Bitcoin Blockchain Divides Community. Crypto Fans All a Buzz Over Innovations Ordinals and Inscriptions.

3 min read

Thousands of NFTs are being inscribed directly into the Bitcoin network’s blockchain, which may harm bitcoin’s long-term value as a digital currency.

The latest innovation that crypto fans are buzzing about, also called Ordinals and inscriptions, allows users to embed up to four megabytes of data directly onto the Bitcoin blockchain. It has divided the Bitcoin community, raising some existential questions on the purpose and future of Bitcoin.

Ordinals, a controversial new protocol deployed on Bitcoin, enables non-fungible tokens (NFTs) to be appended to Bitcoin transactions, effectively bringing NFTs to the largest crypto network by market capitalization.

Every Ordinal inscription is deemed a “digital artifact” because it is claimed to be immutable and forever enshrined on the Bitcoin blockchain.

The Bitcoin blockchain has always contained random, non-financial data — one might argue that the secret message in the genesis block is the first example. The last two significant upgrades to Bitcoin, SegWit, and Taproot, allowed more of this data to be included in the blockchain.

Inscriptions provided the tool to easily enable the loading of such data, along with a manufactured ordering system that aims to create an aura of non-fungibility over satoshis, tiny pieces of bitcoin almost like a penny is to a dollar. Bitcoin’s fungible unit of account, the satoshi, is inherently different from these bitcoin-inscribed NFTs. But is turning Bitcoin into a public data repository good or bad? 

In short, it’s not great if the goal is to keep the “coin” aspect of bitcoin.

Bitcoin NFTs

To answer the question about bitcoin NFTs, let’s classify transactions in Bitcoin into two groups: financial and non-financial transactions (NFTs, pun intended). Financial transactions are transfers of value from party A to party B. This type of transaction serves Bitcoin’s original purpose as a peer-to-peer electronic cash system. These transactions utilize the core computational scaffolding of Bitcoin: transfers of value (satoshis) combined with digital signatures that can unlock that value.

In contrast, NFTs load arbitrary data into the transaction, which can vastly exceed in size the normal components of the transaction. Digital monkeys are examples of such data, including medical records, 3D-printed designs, land titles, audio files, pornography, and political images.

Since inscriptions launched, these NFTs have taken a larger share of scarce Bitcoin block space. Once the blocks fill up, as recently, the Bitcoin transaction fee market will clear by adjusting prices upward. In short, it becomes more expensive to use bitcoin for financial transactions.

Are higher transaction fees a problem? Advocates of inscription would say no. These fees accrue to miners and require users to run more nodes, and some of these new users may start using Bitcoin for money. 

Transaction fees also increase the network’s security budget, preparing Bitcoin for the future when the block subsidy for miners vanishes. Third, this bitcoin NFT trend will inspire future Bitcoin developers and entrepreneurs to build better financial tools to compete with all the new attention Bitcoin blocks are now receiving from the art world. Fourth, NFTs may drive more traffic to the Lightning Network.

Higher Transaction Fees

However, my chief critique of these arguments is that they ignore the equilibrium effects between different bitcoin users. Demand for Bitcoin block space comes from two other sources, financial transactions, and NFTs. Yet they are both clear in a single market. If the fee market clears at a higher price from greater NFT demand, all users will face that higher price.

These higher fees will repel financial users away from Bitcoin and towards other alternatives, likely in the legacy financial system. The Lightning Network is still experimental, and most financial use cases rely heavily on the base layer Bitcoin blockchain.

Limited Block Space

Inscriptions may increase bitcoin adoption among NFT users but will, all else equal, decrease adoption among financial users. An art collector in Tribeca can now store a Bored Ape on Bitcoin, but a bank in Dhaka can also less afford to settle a transaction using bitcoin.

What matters for the security budget is miner revenue. Miners can earn income from high fees and low transaction volume or low fees and high transaction volume. The former describes a Bitcoin serving elite art collectors, the latter as global base money. When framed this way, the choice is not between large and small blocks but between large and small transactions. 

Finally, inscriptions just made the job of every Bitcoin entrepreneur harder. The increase in transaction fees will only increase the customer acquisition cost for any entrepreneur seeking to build a product that facilitates bitcoin payments. Fees matter.

The Future Of Bitcoin

Rather than rushing to execute a software patch or advocate for a soft fork, now is the time to start the hard conversation about what kind of Bitcoin we, as users, want. There is no question that inscriptions will increase demand for bitcoin. But which Bitcoin? NFT Bitcoin or Financial Bitcoin?

I have nothing against NFT artists and the creative work they do. Plus, I’m sympathetic to the financial abuses and frauds that NFT artists unwittingly face in the broader cryptocurrency space. But in the pantheon of problems facing humanity, a distributed, secure, and immutable art gallery does not fulfill Bitcoin’s highest purpose. 

Bitcoin is uniquely positioned to serve as base money for the world, able to free billions of people from the iron fist of central banks. And that, indeed, is its most poetic use.

Key Quote

“There is a subset of Bitcoin culture which sees Bitcoin as purely a way to settle transactions; they see any other use of Bitcoin as an “abuse” of the system. There will always be a contingent of people who oppose using the base layer for anything but those transactions. Though, since Bitcoin is an open, permissionless system, anybody can submit a transaction with any data they want — and we’ve historically seen an incredible amount of creativity and innovation for expanding Bitcoin beyond its original use cases.” – Jamil Dhanani, Founder of Gamma.io

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/digital-assets/2023/02/23/bitcoin-works-better-as-money-than-for-nfts

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