The Great Data War of 2026: Why Bitcoin's "Civil War" Is Actually Proof It's Working

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The Great Data War of 2026: Why Bitcoin's "Civil War" Is Actually Proof It's Working
Bitcoin is having another one of its famous arguments. And if you're new here, you might think the sky is falling. What's being called the "Data War" is the latest flashpoint in a debate that's been simmering since Casey Rodarmor launched the Ordinals protocol in early 2023, essentially using a loophole opened by Taproot to inscribe arbitrary data (images, text, full JPEGs of cartoon monkeys) directly onto individual satoshis. That gave us Bitcoin NFTs. Then BRC-20 tokens. Then a community-wide argument about what Bitcoin is actually for. Now in 2026, those opinions have hardened into two camps, a competing client implementation, and a proposed soft fork. Let me break this down.
The Two Sides
The Purists fly under the banner of Bitcoin Knots and developer Luke Dashjr. They want to filter "non-monetary" data from the blockchain. Their proposal, BIP 110, is a temporary one-year soft fork to cap transaction data. Knots has quietly grown to over 20% of reachable nodes. That's not nothing. Their argument is principled: Bitcoin's block space is a scarce public resource secured by proof-of-work, and using it as a cheap data warehouse for JPEGs is parasitic. Keep the chain lean. Keep node costs low. Keep Bitcoin monetary. The Neutralists are represented by Bitcoin Core, which went the opposite direction in version 30.0 by removing long-standing OP_RETURN data limits. Their argument: "spam" is a subjective label with no objective definition in a permissionless protocol. If a transaction follows consensus rules and pays a competitive fee, it's valid. Full stop. There's also a harder economic argument underneath this: as the block subsidy continues to halve, miner revenue increasingly depends on fees. Ordinals-driven fee pressure isn't pollution. It might be part of the long-term security budget. Both arguments are serious. Neither side is stupid. This is what genuine intellectual tension looks like inside a decentralized system.
Why This Isn't 2017
You see, the comparison to the Blocksize War gets thrown around a lot right now. Understandable, the social media temperature feels similar. But the structural dynamics are fundamentally different, and that distinction matters. In 2017, we weren't debating policy. We were fighting over whether large corporations (Bitmain, major exchanges, VC-backed startups) could effectively hijack the protocol through a hard fork, SegWit2x, without genuine user consensus. They tried. They failed. Bitcoin Cash was born as the consolation prize for the losing side, and Bitcoin only got stronger in the clarity that followed. The 2026 debate is different in three important ways:
- Soft fork, not hard fork. BIP 110 has an activation threshold of 55%. If it doesn't get there, nothing changes. The network doesn't split. Bitcoin keeps producing blocks every ten minutes. The "immune system" is working exactly as designed.
- Both sides want the same chain to win. In 2017, Big Blockers genuinely wanted a different Bitcoin, one optimized for throughput over decentralization. Today, Purists and Neutralists both want this Bitcoin to succeed. They're arguing about the cleanliness of the ledger, not the fundamental rules of the game.
- Miners are economically constrained, in a good way. In 2017, miner incentives were dangerously misaligned with users. Today, miners love Ordinals fees but also understand that destabilizing the network destroys the very asset that makes those fees worth collecting. That economic check is a real constraint on radicalism from either side.
What This Debate Is Really About
Here's the philosophical tension that doesn't get discussed enough: Bitcoin's permissionlessness is one of its core value propositions. The whole point is that no one gets to decide what's a "legitimate" transaction. That's what makes it censorship-resistant money. That's what makes it useful to a dissident in a totalitarian state, a merchant in a currency-collapsing economy, or anyone who just wants to transact without asking permission. The moment you introduce a filter, even a well-intentioned one, you're making a subjective judgment about valid use. And subjective judgments have a way of expanding over time. That's a legitimate concern. It's also why BIP 110 is designed as a temporary soft fork rather than a permanent rule change. Its proponents understand the philosophical weight of what they're proposing. On the other hand, there's a real argument that a blockchain stuffed with speculative JPEG data undermines the monetary utility that makes Bitcoin worth securing in the first place. Mises would recognize the problem: misaligned incentives at the margin can corrupt the core function of an institution over time. The block space is not infinite. The question of what fills it isn't trivial. (For what it's worth, I think inscriptions are a fad. We've seen this before. CryptoKitties clogged Ethereum in 2017, everyone declared it the future of the blockchain, and then it quietly disappeared. Then NFTs did the same thing in 2021, billions in "digital ownership," celebrity drops, profile picture projects, and now most of those collections are worth pennies on the dollar. The market has a way of moving on. The question is whether the protocol makes permanent accommodations for something that may not deserve them.)
The Takeaway
Bitcoin has been declared dead over 500 times. It survived the collapse of Mt. Gox, the Blocksize War, multiple regulatory crackdowns, and more than one "this is the end" moment that turned out to be a beginning. What each of those moments revealed, once the dust settled, was that Bitcoin's resistance to change isn't a bug. It's the most important feature. The fact that BIP 110 might not reach 55% isn't a failure of governance. It's governance working. No single developer, company, or vocal minority gets to decide the future of the protocol unilaterally. That's by design. That's the whole point. Whether Bitcoin remains a pure monetary rail or gradually absorbs a data layer function, the decision will be made by nodes, miners, and users operating in their own self-interest, not by a committee, not by a government, and definitely not by whoever is loudest on social media this week. Run your own node. Understand what client you're running. Know the difference between Knots and Core, and why it matters. This is what being your own bank actually looks like, not just holding the keys, but participating in the network that makes those keys mean something. And while you're at it? Ignore the noise. The infighting, the Twitter wars, the "your side is killing Bitcoin" discourse. Bitcoiners are going to disagree. That's not a crack in the foundation. That's the foundation. A decentralized system doesn't produce consensus by silencing dissent, it produces it by letting every idea compete on its merits. Different clients, different proposals, different philosophies. All of it is the process working. The moment everyone agrees on everything is the moment you should start worrying. The blocks keep coming. Every ten minutes. They don't care about the argument. Philosopher, computer nerd and Bitcoin Maxi since 2014. Helping spread the good word of Bitcoin and Freedom.
Originally published at bitcoinwell.com/blog
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"content": "\n## The Great Data War of 2026: Why Bitcoin's \"Civil War\" Is Actually Proof It's Working\n\nBitcoin is having another one of its famous arguments. And if you're new here, you might think the sky is falling.\nWhat's being called the \"Data War\" is the latest flashpoint in a debate that's been simmering since Casey Rodarmor launched the Ordinals protocol in early 2023, essentially using a loophole opened by Taproot to inscribe arbitrary data (images, text, full JPEGs of cartoon monkeys) directly onto individual satoshis. That gave us Bitcoin NFTs. Then BRC-20 tokens. Then a community-wide argument about what Bitcoin is actually for.\nNow in 2026, those opinions have hardened into two camps, a competing client implementation, and a proposed soft fork. Let me break this down.\n\n## The Two Sides\n\nThe Purists fly under the banner of Bitcoin Knots and developer Luke Dashjr. They want to filter \"non-monetary\" data from the blockchain. Their proposal, BIP 110, is a temporary one-year soft fork to cap transaction data. Knots has quietly grown to over 20% of reachable nodes. That's not nothing. Their argument is principled: Bitcoin's block space is a scarce public resource secured by proof-of-work, and using it as a cheap data warehouse for JPEGs is parasitic. Keep the chain lean. Keep node costs low. Keep Bitcoin monetary.\nThe Neutralists are represented by Bitcoin Core, which went the opposite direction in version 30.0 by removing long-standing OP_RETURN data limits. Their argument: \"spam\" is a subjective label with no objective definition in a permissionless protocol. If a transaction follows consensus rules and pays a competitive fee, it's valid. Full stop. There's also a harder economic argument underneath this: as the block subsidy continues to halve, miner revenue increasingly depends on fees. Ordinals-driven fee pressure isn't pollution. It might be part of the long-term security budget.\nBoth arguments are serious. Neither side is stupid. This is what genuine intellectual tension looks like inside a decentralized system.\n\n## Why This Isn't 2017\n\nYou see, the comparison to the Blocksize War gets thrown around a lot right now. Understandable, the social media temperature feels similar. But the structural dynamics are fundamentally different, and that distinction matters.\nIn 2017, we weren't debating policy. We were fighting over whether large corporations (Bitmain, major exchanges, VC-backed startups) could effectively hijack the protocol through a hard fork, SegWit2x, without genuine user consensus. They tried. They failed. Bitcoin Cash was born as the consolation prize for the losing side, and Bitcoin only got stronger in the clarity that followed.\nThe 2026 debate is different in three important ways:\n1. Soft fork, not hard fork. BIP 110 has an activation threshold of 55%. If it doesn't get there, nothing changes. The network doesn't split. Bitcoin keeps producing blocks every ten minutes. The \"immune system\" is working exactly as designed.\n2. Both sides want the same chain to win. In 2017, Big Blockers genuinely wanted a different Bitcoin, one optimized for throughput over decentralization. Today, Purists and Neutralists both want this Bitcoin to succeed. They're arguing about the cleanliness of the ledger, not the fundamental rules of the game.\n3. Miners are economically constrained, in a good way. In 2017, miner incentives were dangerously misaligned with users. Today, miners love Ordinals fees but also understand that destabilizing the network destroys the very asset that makes those fees worth collecting. That economic check is a real constraint on radicalism from either side.\n\n## What This Debate Is Really About\n\nHere's the philosophical tension that doesn't get discussed enough: Bitcoin's permissionlessness is one of its core value propositions. The whole point is that no one gets to decide what's a \"legitimate\" transaction. That's what makes it censorship-resistant money. That's what makes it useful to a dissident in a totalitarian state, a merchant in a currency-collapsing economy, or anyone who just wants to transact without asking permission.\nThe moment you introduce a filter, even a well-intentioned one, you're making a subjective judgment about valid use. And subjective judgments have a way of expanding over time. That's a legitimate concern. It's also why BIP 110 is designed as a temporary soft fork rather than a permanent rule change. Its proponents understand the philosophical weight of what they're proposing.\nOn the other hand, there's a real argument that a blockchain stuffed with speculative JPEG data undermines the monetary utility that makes Bitcoin worth securing in the first place. Mises would recognize the problem: misaligned incentives at the margin can corrupt the core function of an institution over time. The block space is not infinite. The question of what fills it isn't trivial.\n(For what it's worth, I think inscriptions are a fad. We've seen this before. CryptoKitties clogged Ethereum in 2017, everyone declared it the future of the blockchain, and then it quietly disappeared. Then NFTs did the same thing in 2021, billions in \"digital ownership,\" celebrity drops, profile picture projects, and now most of those collections are worth pennies on the dollar. The market has a way of moving on. The question is whether the protocol makes permanent accommodations for something that may not deserve them.)\n\n## The Takeaway\n\nBitcoin has been declared dead over 500 times. It survived the collapse of Mt. Gox, the Blocksize War, multiple regulatory crackdowns, and more than one \"this is the end\" moment that turned out to be a beginning.\nWhat each of those moments revealed, once the dust settled, was that Bitcoin's resistance to change isn't a bug. It's the most important feature. The fact that BIP 110 might not reach 55% isn't a failure of governance. It's governance working. No single developer, company, or vocal minority gets to decide the future of the protocol unilaterally. That's by design. That's the whole point.\nWhether Bitcoin remains a pure monetary rail or gradually absorbs a data layer function, the decision will be made by nodes, miners, and users operating in their own self-interest, not by a committee, not by a government, and definitely not by whoever is loudest on social media this week.\nRun your own node. Understand what client you're running. Know the difference between Knots and Core, and why it matters. This is what being your own bank actually looks like, not just holding the keys, but participating in the network that makes those keys mean something.\nAnd while you're at it? Ignore the noise. The infighting, the Twitter wars, the \"your side is killing Bitcoin\" discourse. Bitcoiners are going to disagree. That's not a crack in the foundation. That's the foundation. A decentralized system doesn't produce consensus by silencing dissent, it produces it by letting every idea compete on its merits. Different clients, different proposals, different philosophies. All of it is the process working. The moment everyone agrees on everything is the moment you should start worrying.\nThe blocks keep coming. Every ten minutes. They don't care about the argument.\nPhilosopher, computer nerd and Bitcoin Maxi since 2014. Helping spread the good word of Bitcoin and Freedom.\n\n*Originally published at [bitcoinwell.com/blog](https://bitcoinwell.com/blog/the-great-data-war-of-2026-why-bitcoins-civil-war-is-actually-proof-its-working)*",
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