Deeeep dive into the Bip-110 v Core controversy

This really lengthy documentary text by hodlonaut was groked here into a quite digestible entry level abstract. The original (links below) will keep you an afternoon or two focused. (You may skim some of the meticulously collected sources and still be able to follow the main thread of what was going on.) Also consider to let your device read it to you.

Before you trigger happy downvoters blast your shotguns prematurely again, read it comprehensively and than think again and contribute to the discussion with some sharp thoughts. Thank you.

Abstract (by Grok)

The Quiet Shift from Bitcoin Core: In the fall of 2025, what had been quietly building for years became visible. Thousands of node runners switched from Bitcoin Core to Bitcoin Knots after maintainer Gloria Zhao pushed through a change that loosened the default limits for OP_RETURN data. For many, this was the moment when a creeping process became apparent: Bitcoin was in danger of transforming from a scarce monetary network into a general-purpose data repository.

The three-part study “Capture” by hodlonaut traces how a close-knit, informal network emerged around figures like John Newbery, Chaincode Labs, Brink, and Optech through dinners, residencies, and funding channels. This group shaped not only technical decisions but also the culture and personnel composition of Bitcoin Core.

On one side were pragmatically oriented developers who demanded greater openness for non-monetary uses and raised concerns about “censorship”. On the other side were critics who primarily wanted to protect Bitcoin as hard money and warned against dilution.

What is particularly striking is how early and systematically critics who foresaw the cumulative danger of these seemingly isolated, small “nudges” were silenced. Even with changes that appeared technically harmless, prescient voices like Luke Dashjr and Jon Atack encountered a recurring pattern of social ostracism, funding blocks, and public discrediting—even before clear battle lines had formed. It seemed as if the network recognized threats to its agenda early on and combated them with unusually harsh, more social than purely technical means.

The individual steps (documentation changes, filter rejection, limit relaxation) initially appeared unrelated. Together, however, they revealed a clear direction: more data on the blockchain, more room for spammers and speculators. The defense of these nudges was often surprisingly intense for a decentralized project. Funding chains and cultural influences reinforced the impression that not only code, but also a particular worldview was being enforced.

Ultimately, the suspicion of informal power concentration remains: In a system without a formal hierarchy, a well-connected milieu can de facto dictate the direction. The small, fiercely defended changes added up to a significant signal—and generated precisely the mistrust that erupted in the Knots migration.

Whether it was a deliberate capture, natural group dynamics, or a mixture of both remains unclear. For a project built on decentralization and skepticism toward concentrated power, this pattern is nonetheless worrying.

Links:

citadel21.com/the-network

citadel21.com/the-lever

citadel21.com/the-merge

Happy reading, beautiful people! Get smart.

submitted by /u/No1orangepilled to r/btc
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Quelle: bitcoin-en