‘Bitcoin Standard’ author backs funding dev to make spamming Bitcoin costly
18 Mai 2025 - 11:40AM
Cointelegraph


Economist and author of The Bitcoin Standard, Saifedean
Ammous, has weighed in on the ongoing debate over spam
inscriptions on the Bitcoin network, suggesting he would “throw in
a few sats” to fund a full-time developer focused on making Bitcoin
spamming more difficult and expensive.
Ammous made the remarks in response to a thread initiated by the
pseudonymous developer GrassFedBitcoin, who called for Bitcoin Core
to merge pull request #28408, which would enable node operators to
filter inscriptions more easily.
According to GrassFedBitcoin, the lack of inscription filtering
tools contributes to unnecessary blockchain bloat and undermines
Bitcoin (BTC)’s role as a
monetary protocol.
“No one running a node wants to relay inscriptions,” he
wrote, arguing
that the OP_RETURN limit increases were justified in the past under
false assumptions. He pushed for a configurable, default policy
discouraging the use of Bitcoin for storing JPEGs rather than
monetary data.
Blockstream CEO Adam Back challenged the proposal, describing
inscription filtering as an “arms race.” He noted that spam data
embedded in Bitcoin transactions can be endlessly modified using
code structures, requiring constant updates to filtering tools.
Source: Adam Back
Related: Bitcoin Ordinals vs. Ethereum NFTs: A
comparative overview
Ammous compares Bitcoin spam to email
Ammous compared the Bitcoin spam issue to email spam — another
arms race society continues to fight without abandoning the
system.
“It’s not easy, but it’s worth trying to help bankrupt the
spammers faster,” Ammous said. He argued that fighting spam is not
censorship, noting that node operators already reject invalid
transactions.
“So a node runner looking to remove retards' spam is no
less valid than retards' spam,” he added.
The debate drew commentary from other users. One participant
suggested Core developers treat spam-coding employees at certain
startups as “unwilling QA engineers” and simply unstandardize every
trick they deploy.
Ammous took it further, proposing to “deprecate” the work of
developers building spam tools and even hiring outside coders to
overwhelm their systems.
Source: Saifedean Ammous
The conversation reflects ongoing tensions in the Bitcoin
community over the network’s intended use. With inscriptions
continuing to congest the network, calls for technical
countermeasures — and pointed critiques of those defending spam —
are growing louder.
In a Feb. 4 report, Mempool Research said
the adoption of
inscriptions could drive the Bitcoin network’s
average block
size as high as 4 megabytes (MB) per block, far higher than
current averages.
Bitcoin’s average block size — the amount of data in each block
posted to the network’s public ledger — is currently around 1.5
MB.
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...
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