Support for Bitcoin Improvement Proposal 110 (BIP-110) is gradually increasing as the Bitcoin community remains divided over how to handle non-monetary data on the network. The proposal has re-ignited long-running debates around decentralization, node costs, and the role of arbitrary data in Bitcoin transactions.
Bitcoin Portal Recent data shows that more than 2% of active Bitcoin nodes are now signaling support for BIP-110. Roughly 580 nodes out of over 24,000 have adopted the proposal, primarily through alternative node software rather than the most widely used default client. While still a minority, this marks a notable rise in coordination around limiting on-chain data.
BIP-110 introduces a temporary soft fork designed to reduce spam by capping transaction output sizes and restricting OP_RETURN data to 83 bytes. The proposal is set to run for one year, after which it may be extended, modified, or removed depending on network consensus.

The renewed interest in BIP-110 follows controversy surrounding a recent node software update that removed limits on arbitrary data embedded in transactions. Critics argue that unlimited data encourages spam, increases blockchain storage requirements, and raises the cost of running a node—potentially leading to greater network centralization.
Supporters of the change counter that data limits do little to prevent spam and that market forces, not protocol rules, should determine block space usage. As adoption of BIP-110 grows, the outcome may shape how Bitcoin balances openness with its core principle of decentralization.
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