Are Bitcoin Ordinals the next big innovation in the Bitcoin space, or an attack on Bitcoin's fungibility?
But ordinals, as "Bitcoin NFTs" are called, have also kicked off a veritable storm in the BTC community. This article analyzes:
- What are Bitcoin Ordinals?
- How do Bitcoin Ordinals work?
- How are Ordinals different from NFTs?
- What are the effects on the Bitcoin network?
- How do you buy Ordinals?
- What are the most important Bitcoin NFT collections?
- What do Bitcoiners think about ordinals?
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What Are Bitcoin Ordinals?
Sats are the smallest unit of Bitcoin with a value of 0.00000001 BTC.
Ordinals work in the same manner. They take advantage of the fact that each individual satoshi can be uniquely identified by its equivalent of a "serial code.”
How Do Bitcoin Ordinals Work?
Should Bitcoin be only for processing financial transactions?
Or should we also use it as a secure and decentralized network to store data?
Read also: Bitcoin’s Taproot Upgrade and the Possibility of DeFi on Bitcoin
So, where do Ordinals come in?
According to Ordinals developer Casey Rodarmor, the position of a sat in the Bitcoin blockchain can be identified according to four parameters:
- The Index of Sat in the Block.
- The Index of the Block in the Difficulty Adjustment Period X/2016
- The Index of Block in Halving Epoch X/210,000
- The Cycle Number
Using this mental model, the first sat in a block would be rarer since, well, it's the first sat. Similar to how some coins used to be valued among collectors for being part of a rare mint, this would allow sats to be ranked ordinally.
Side note: Not all Bitcoiners agree with this. See the final paragraph for more info.
At the protocol level, sats are still fungible. Just like our "Dollar NFT," you can still spend them. At the social level, each inscribed sat would be unique because it carries an extra piece of information.
How Do Ordinal Inscriptions Work?
First, you create a taproot output with the inscription content. Then, you spend the output, revealing the inscription content on the blockchain. The inscription content is wrapped in something called an "envelope," which is a type of no-op that doesn't change the script.
For example, if you wanted to store the string "Satoshi rules" on the blockchain, you would wrap it in an envelope and then store it in a taproot output. You can then track the inscription using the rules of ordinal theory, which means you can transfer it, buy it, sell it, or recover it if it gets lost.
How Are Ordinals Different from NFTs?
Inscription Over Tokenization
As you may be able to tell, Ordinals are "de facto NFTs." But not really. Technically they are still "only sats." Unlike NFTs, which are minted as completely new tokens, Ordinals have the raw file data inscribed directly onto the Bitcoin blockchain.
On-chain Nature
On the one hand, Ordinals are "not really fungible" since they use a workaround to create an NFT-like construction. On the other hand, NFTs on other chains can contain reference points to files that are not even hosted on the actual blockchain. Ordinals, however, contain the actual raw file data directly written into the Bitcoin blockchain.
Block Size Limit
Bitcoin block size is capped by the 4MB limit and by the hard cap of 21M coins. If suddenly all block space on the blockchain were to be used for Ordinals, this would cap the amount of "Bitcoin NFT mints" that can happen. Other chains are less restricted in this regard. However, this is mostly theoretical since Ordinals would have to become so popular as to consume all the block space on Bitcoin.
Concurrency
Lack of Smart Contract Functionality and Infrastructure
Lost Inscriptions
NFTs can be lost if you lose access to your wallet. But inscribed sats can be accidentally spent. Then the miner processing the transaction would be, knowingly or unknowingly, in possession of the Ordinal. As a consequence, the Bitcoin blockchain could become scattered with "sats with artifacts," almost like damaged or tainted currency bills are in circulation.
Content Moderation
Since Bitcoin is truly permissionless, inscriptions on sats cannot be censored. That means illicit and copyrighted content could end up on the blockchain without the option to ever remove it again. The potential need for “content moderation” is one reason why Bitcoin purists wholeheartedly reject the idea of Ordinals.
How Do You Buy and Create Bitcoin Ordinals?
Popular Bitcoin NFT Collections
Needless to say that you should proceed with caution in this red-hot market, but here are some popular "Bitcoin NFT" collections.
Ordinal Punks
A collection of 100 NFTs minted within the first 650 Inscriptions on the Bitcoin chain, with the highest Inscription in the collection taking up spot #642. The lowest bid is 3.7 BTC, and the highest asking price is 50 BTC.\
Taproot Wizards
An Ordinal collection of hand-drawn NFT wizards created by Udi Wertheimer. There are currently only a handful of Taproot Wizards inscribed on Bitcoin.
Bitcoin Rocks
A collection of 100 supply-capped NFTs that channels the spirit and aesthetic of Ether Rocks, one of the first NFT collectible projects on the Ethereum chain.
Timechain Collectibles
A highly-limited set of just 21 Ordinals that depict timepieces in various forms. The whole collection was minted into a single block on January 30, 2023, with rarity levels including Pocket Watches, Ancient Sundials, Wristwatches, Wall Clocks, Cyberpunk Alarm Clocks, Clock Towers, Monolith, and Grandfather clock.
Ordinal Loops
A collection of some of the lowest-numbered Inscriptions among Bitcoin Ordinals, starting at Inscription 452. The NFT, known as Object 0, is a rotating mathematical torus and is one of just seven similar animations that form the first of three planned series drops from the Ordinal Loops team.
What Are the Effects on the Bitcoin Network?
Moreover, if we look at the fee share of security spend, Ordinals are a blip in a graph that has been down only for a long time:
In conclusion:
- Fees spent on Ordinals have surged, but they are mostly low-value transactions.
- Miner revenue hasn't meaningfully increased.
- Blocks are "less empty" than they used to be.
- Without further data, it's hard to say whether this is a short-term hype or a change of direction.
What Do Bitcoiners Think About Ordinals?
Uhh, here we get to the really spicy part of the story.
- They prematurely grow block data, implying it will still be needed when hyperbitcoinization hits.
- They prematurely increase fees before Bitcoin has onboarded enough people.
- They normalize miner collusion and MEV.
- They misuse the OP_RETURN function for something it was not intended to be used for.
- They bloat nodes.
- They enable malware, copyright, and privacy violations to be stored on Bitcoin.
- Worst of all, they connect Bitcoin to "shitcoin crypto scams in the popular consciousness (and normies getting rugged by buying fake NFTs, etc)."
When Bitcoiners were proudly proclaiming that Bitcoin is not crypto during the FTX bankruptcy, that is not what they had in mind.
Neutral bystanders observe the dumpster fire with amusement. Maybe Bitcoiners are just not used anymore to someone rattling their cage?
However, some in the Bitcoin community see Ordinals, and their possible sudden fall from grace, as evidence that the Bitcoin security model is broken and needs fixing: