This is my first response/comment on this mailing list.  I think there are 
several issues that have risen to the surface here including this one on a 
broken communication link (well written message btw).


  1.  Those outside of the dev community are perplexed by the process and 
feeling discounted, unheard, and/or rejected.  Most of the issues/PRs/BIPs that 
the dev community deals with are beyond the ability of the general population 
to understand, but occasionally there are ones that they grasp (at least 
somewhat) and for which they have opinion.  I’ve certainly learned that when 
someone has an opinion it is really important to let them express it, 
otherwise, the pressure inside them builds and they erupt like a volcano.  The 
Bitcoin ecosystem and its members are radically different today than 5-10 years 
ago – it is bigger, wider, and has broader interests now - it appears that 
process and communication mechanisms currently used by Core are not capable of 
reaching the community properly anymore. Note that communication means two-way 
as well.

When someone buys Bitcoin or starts working within the ecosystem, there is no 
membership guide, owner’s manual, or employee on-boarding process.  It comes 
off very badly when someone trying to engage is told that they don’t count or 
aren’t using proper channels, especially when they don’t even know where to go 
learn the rules of engagement.  That isn’t necessarily anyone’s fault, but I’ve 
been involved in Bitcoin since 2017 and even now am still learning new things 
about the engagement process, and there definitely have been several surprises 
and frustrations for me over the past handful of days.



  1.  The ecosystem is much more complex than ever before with people and 
companies developing products and services with assumptions of how Bitcoin will 
operate.  Many of these are being done in stealth-mode as well.  Some people 
are pouring their heart and soul (and money) into their projects and the 
expectation of a standard is often crucial.  I am one of these folks, beyond 
what I do in mining (CEO of Barefoot Mining) and as a board member at Ocean, I 
have been working for two years on a project related to enhancing block space 
access.  This proposed change in standardness may impact my project in a 
negative manner, and, it is certainly possible others might be in a similar 
position.  Regardless, changes to standardness are HUGE.  I spent most of my 
career within the Personal Computer space and learned the hard way that changes 
to a standards are a dangerous game.   I expand a bit on this in this X  post:: 
https://x.com/boomer_btc/status/1917687830148526095

  2.  The proposed change also appears to be reduction in flexibility and 
configurability.  In general, this is never a good thing.  IMO, we should be 
going in the direction of giving people more choices and flexibility (although 
it is fine to make suggestions, set defaults, or provide general guidelines.)  
How someone configures their node and creates their mempool is akin to free 
speech within Bitcoin. The same goes for those like me that are miners and 
create our own block templates – this is also part of our free speech (and our 
business).  In the end though, whether you are a user or a miner, the more 
choices you have, the more freedom of speech you have.

Side note: Ultimately, as a miner I am in the business of creating block space 
– at least that is my view, and contrary to popular belief, miners are not 
always motivated to simply pick transactions that generate the highest block 
reward in the immediate block, and as time goes by this will become even more 
common and apparent.  I’ve spoken a lot on this recently in public forums, so I 
won’t dwell on it here.


  1.  Finally, there is the issue of an OP_RETURN change, if it encourages more 
spam, and if we are just caving into an inevitability.  I am against the 
proposed change and, even if that is true that the spam will ultimately find a 
way, I feel we are acquiescing way too early.  Enough has been said on this 
topic in other forums so I won’t go further.



From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of 
PandaCute <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, May 2, 2025 at 7:11 AM
To: Bitcoin Development Mailing List <[email protected]>
Subject: [bitcoindev] Re: Relax OP_RETURN standardness restrictions
You don't often get email from [email protected]. Learn why this is 
important<https://aka.ms/LearnAboutSenderIdentification>
I think this debate is missing one important part: a communication link between 
the developers and the users. The developers are speaking with the developers, 
the users are speaking with the users, and no one is really trying to 
understand where the other side is coming from. It's been a lot of aggressive, 
unproductive back-and-forth, with both sides accusing each other of bad 
intentions and completely dismissing each other's points.

This is a technical mailing list aimed at devs, so I'll try to summarize what 
I've seen in normal_users_land, and the general feeling out there right now. 
Obviously, I'm not trying to suggest that users *feelings* should be dictate 
the technical direction of Bitcoin. However, it is important that there is 
mutual respect and trust between users and devs.

Right now, trust is pretty broken. It can be regained, but not without 
understanding what went wrong in the first place.

I saw on IRC some devs suggesting they spend time on podcasts and social media 
to explain the motivations behind this proposal *before* merging it, instead of 
merging now and hoping people just accept it. I think that’s a fantastic idea, 
and the way to go. I particularly liked jonatack's message - “if Core shows 
humility and patience, it would surprise people and improve things.”

Now, about the proposal itself and what it *feels* like: It’s a big change that 
came out of nowhere, especially at a time when spam doesn’t seem like a big 
issue. It’s a bit… shocking? Normally Bitcoin changes are discussed for ages, 
PRs take so long to get merged, because of all the care that devs put into 
considering the pros and the cons, but here? We get a mailing list post (that 
no user is reading, let’s be honest) and a PR with a lot of contributors saying 
“yeah, let’s do this!”. There should be a bit more research. (Maybe there was, 
but behind closed doors?). We want to know about all the protocols that are 
bloating the UTXO set and that could be using OP_RETURN instead. We want to 
know how many transactions like these are in each block, and how many there 
will be once the new protocols start getting deployed. We want to see that you 
did your homework for weeks before trying to change the policies.

It feels weird—like some sort of attack or a bribe. One protocol is mentioned 
that would benefit from this change, and then an investor ACKs the PR. Someone 
points out a potential conflict of interest, and their comment gets hidden. 
That’s shady, no denying it.

And then, it feels that users have no say. It's a ""technocracy"", where devs 
have all the power in their hands and can decide where the protocol goes, while 
completely dismissing users' concerns.

Users do have concerns—lots of them. And I encourage devs to step out and talk 
to "regular" Bitcoin users. It’s not just a “loud minority”—there are many 
people genuinely worried: “Can we trust Core devs anymore? Is there even 
another option?”. But their concerns are dismissed, their comments deleted or 
hidden, they're treated like "bullies" that devs should ignore, devs should 
"merge Todd's PR and call it a day".

Without understanding all the technical details, I'd say there's a pretty good 
chance that the very smart people that work on Core are right once again. 
Statistically, it's very likely. Communicate to users, explain your 
motivations, and show that you want to listen to our concerns.

Lastly, as irritating as that might be, users freaking out and holding core 
developers accountable and flooding Github is a feature, not a bug. Devs aren't 
the Bitcoin gods, they are humans, and humans can be bribed,  can be coerced, 
can have conflict of interest, can fck up.

Users care and want to protect Bitcoin. Be grateful.

Respectfully,
A Bitcoin Dev
On Friday, May 2, 2025 at 12:46:20 AM UTC+2 Antoine Poinsot wrote:
As i have repeatedly asked people to take conceptual discussions to the mailing 
list, i am circling back to this thread to answer objections. I have also 
written my point of view and reasons for proposing this change in a blog post 
which goes into more details: https://antoinep.com/posts/relay_policy_drama.

Going through the emails in order.

Am I the only one left on this list who actually cares about Bitcoin's survival?

Thanks Luke for your measured take. It's refreshing to see we have adults on 
both sides of this "debate".

With that history in mind, removing limits on OP_RETURN standardness size is 
pointless.

Yes, it is pointless for people who want to store massive amount of data. It is 
not for people who want to store a small amount of data in a time-sensitive 
transaction's output. Because they need their transaction to be relayed on the 
p2p network, and are therefore pushed to use unspendable outputs instead.

Relaxing OP_RETURN size limits without dealing with the inscriptions

This is orthogonal. The harmful behaviour described in OP is possible today 
regardless of inscriptions.

There's little to no incentive to use OP_RETURN for data storage when using the 
'inscriptions' exploit costs 4x less in transactions. What's the point of 
having a "standard" way to store arbitrary data if the exploit method is 4x 
cheaper? And the nonstandard version of the exploit allows 4x the data?

You have obviously not properly read or understood OP. There is no need to 
speculate about what would happen or not. People are using outputs to store 
data today​. The only question now is harm reduction: given that people are 
storing this data in outputs today, do we want to offer a way to do it that 
does not force every single full node on the network to store their data 
forever?

That said i agree that this is not going to change anything for people who try 
to store large amount of data onchain, they already have a 4x cheaper way of 
doing so.

For example, let's say I want to distribute malware. Well, might as well just 
store it in an OP_RETURN.

The point about storing data on everyone's disk was addressed by others: it's 
already possible and that's why Core XOR's the content of 
third-party-controlled data it writes to disk. But an interesting fact on this 
specific point about malware and OP_RETURN outputs is how they have already 
been used in the past to resiliently update the domain of a malware's C2 
servers: 
https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/glupteba_final-1.pdf .

This is a fundamental change to the nature of what the Bitcoin network itself 
is in its entirety. [...] Bitcoin as we know it changes forever in the most 
fundamental way imaginable

Wild emotional claims with no ground whatsoever don't convince anybody and only 
hurt your credibility.

and we might as well give up on Bitcoin ever being a thing if this is the path 
chosen

Well if you believe the whole system is as brittle as relying on people playing 
nice for security, you might as well give up now.

Have the courage to reject this type of thing for the sake of the overall 
project.

Right. We do that, and you go outside and touch some grass for the benefit of 
all subscribers to this mailing list.

If you don't have confidence in the Bitcoin Core developers, instead of 
insulting them, you could also just (help) maintain a fork of the project. I 
obviously think you're misguided here, but at least it's better to channel this 
distrust into something constructive. Given the number of people who share your 
sentiment, such a project should be perfectly viable.

Doubt.

It was suggested in two different PRs ([0] and [1]) that the conceptual 
discussion take place in this thread, so I am submitting my comments here.

Thank you for taking conceptual discussion to the mailing list. AJ already 
addressed your claims, so i won't repeat it here.

This is just a temporary cease-fire while the spammers reload their ammunition. 
There is obviously about to be another wave

Between this one and your previous email, you certainly do know a lot about the 
future! How's your trading going?

otherwise what is the point of eliminating OP_RETURN restrictions?

To not force people to bloat the UTxO set to store a trivial amount of data in 
the output of a time-sensitive transactions. On the specifics, Citrea stores a 
zk-proof verifying Bitcoin's longest chain composed of a 128-byte Groth16 proof 
and 16-byte total accumulated work (sauce: 
https://x.com/ekrembal_/status/1918008476552356202). I don't know and don't 
care why they do it in this way in particular, i just wish they did so in 
pruneable OP_RETURN outputs instead of unspendable Taproot outputs as they do 
today. Or worse, start thinking about bare multisig.

Yes, and then the money printer makes sure that there is always enough easy 
money sloshing around in the economy so that more pop up where the old ones 
dropped out. This can and will continue indefinitely if we do nothing.

Money printer financing working people forever certainly isn't something i 
expected to read on the Bitcoin dev mailing list!

My proposal is not to counter literally every type of spam. Just the ones that 
have protocols relying on consistent transaction formats. Creating specific 
filters against just these worst offenders should

This is veering off-topic for this thread. If you want to argue that Core 
should filter inscriptions could you take it to the appropriate thread? This 
thread is just about damage control for people storing data in transaction 
outputs.

I believe you greatly overestimate the skill and competence of the people who 
would do this type of thing. You could accomplish what you've laid out. I could 
accomplish it.

Your hubris gives me second-hand embarrassment. I hope the C2 domain update i 
shared above gives you a clue that there does in fact exist other smart people 
in the world. Threat actors would laugh pretty hard at your arrogant emails and 
emotional breakdowns, but they probably don't care about your filters in the 
slightest anyways.

After reading the whole thread i have yet to read a single sound objection to 
lifting the OP_RETURN restrictions.
On Thursday, April 17th, 2025 at 2:52 PM, Antoine Poinsot 
<[email protected]> wrote:

Hi,

Standardness rules exist for 3 mains reasons: mitigate DoS vectors, provide 
upgrade hooks, or as a nudge to deter some usages.

Bitcoin Core will by default only relay and mine transactions with at most a 
single OP_RETURN output, with a scriptPubKey no larger than 83 bytes. This 
standardness rule falls into the third category: it aims to mildly deter data 
storage while still allowing a less harmful alternative than using 
non-provably-unspendable outputs.

Developers are now designing constructions that work around these limitations. 
An example is Clementine, the recently-announced Citrea bridge, which uses 
unspendable Taproot outputs to store data in its "WatchtowerChallenge" 
transaction due to the standardness restrictions on the size of OP_RETURNs[^0]. 
Meanwhile, we have witnessed in recent years that the nudge is ineffective to 
deter storing data onchain.

Since the restrictions on the usage of OP_RETURN outputs encourage harmful 
practices while being ineffective in deterring unwanted usage, i propose to 
drop them. I suggest to start by lifting the restriction on the size of the 
scriptPubKey for OP_RETURN outputs, as a first minimal step to stop encouraging 
harmful behaviour, and to then proceed to lift the restriction on the number of 
OP_RETURN outputs per transactions.

Antoine Poinsot

[^0]: See section 6.1 of their whitepaper here 
https://citrea.xyz/clementine_whitepaper.pdf

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