The Beginner’s Guide To Bitcoin Ordinals

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Bitcoin Ordinals are the latest milestone on the road to bitcoin adoption and the spread of blockchain technology. Ordinals combine the latest innovations in the bitcoin blockchain with the budding world of non-fungible tokens (NFTs).

But what are Ordinals? And why are people buying them? The answer to these two questions is couched in the combination mentioned above.

What Bitcoin Ordinals are is a technical question requiring a nuanced explanation of some of the most recent developments in the bitcoin space, such as the SegWit and Taproot upgrades. These technical enhancements are the necessary components that allow for embedding additional data into a bitcoin transaction. More specifically, it involves associating more data with a single satoshi (the smallest unit of bitcoin)

Why would people buy a single satoshi with a bit of additional data? To understand this, one has to understand why people are buying NFTs. The core ideas motivating the world of NFTs are convincing investors to buy Ordinals: ideas such as rarity, uniqueness, and artistic/historical value.

In short, the Ordinals are sats turned into NFTs: NFTs baked directly into the bitcoin blockchain.

Confusing as it may sound, before learning about the technical details of “what” Ordinals are, it is best to start with the “why” and focus on what makes NFTs valuable.

Why Buy NFTs?

NFTs are non-fungible tokens. Fungibility is the ability for something to be replaced perfectly by another thing. For example, one dollar for another dollar. It doesn’t matter which dollar someone has, as no value or functionality has been lost by exchanging one for another. Bitcoin is fungible in this way, one bitcoin is exactly the same as any other bitcoin.

Something is non-fungible when it can’t be replaced, aka it’s completely unique. Artwork is the best example of this; the Mona Lisa can’t be equivalently exchanged for another artwork, and more so, it can’t even be replaced by an exact replica of the Mona Lisa. The object we keep in the museum is the original, irreplaceable, and unique work of Leonardo Da Vinci. Non-fungible tokens share this property; they are not equivalent to any other tokens.

NFTs are created on a blockchain with a unique identifier for every token. This identifying information is typically connected via metadata to an external piece of media, such as a picture. Creating a token and linking its metadata to something is called minting.

In the NFT space, minting an NFT is seen as owning the associated piece of media. Like owning a famous piece of art, investors rarely hold the art in their homes, but instead, they have a certificate of ownership. An NFT is more like such a certificate than it is like physically possessing the art itself. Regardless, this certificate is sold for the price the piece of art is valued at, NFTs are traded based on the perceived value of the unique item it is connected to.

This is more than an analogy; in the NFT world, trading these tokens connected to digital media is participating in a collectors market. Such a market values ownership over unique individual items of some historical or creative significance.

What Are Bitcoin Ordinals?

Time for the nitty-gritty of what an Ordinal technically is.

Ordinals are a numbering system applied to satoshis. Like a serial number, each sat has a unique ordinal number associated with it. This number is an individual identifier for each sat based on when it was mined.

In principle, such a numbering system is all that is needed to make sats non-fungible. Every sat is completely unique and identifiable through its individual number.

However, to function like NFTs, the sat has to connect to external media. This is where SegWit and Taproot come in.

Segregated Witness (SegWit)

SegWit was an update to the bitcoin blockchain that “segregated” the witness data (the signature) into a separate section that supported additional arbitrary information. This upgrade means users can store a larger amount of data inside bitcoin’s 1 megabyte blocksize. The introduction of this arbitrary data is what helps enable Ordinals.

Taproot

The Taproot upgrade was built on the foundation SegWit established. Taproot allows multiple signatures to be batched together and validated as one. Along with increasing efficiency and scalability, this further reduced the limits on the amount of arbitrary data that could be included in a bitcoin transaction.

By allowing efficient sizable amounts of arbitrary data in bitcoin transactions, SegWit and Taproot add the missing component needed to make Ordinal-defined satoshis into NFTs. These sats are now completely unique and ready to hold the metadata associated with media, such as text or pictures.

However, it’s important to note that Ordinals do not suddenly make bitcoin non-fungible in general. The Ordinal numbering system is not a part of the bitcoin blockchain; rather, it is a tool to track individual sats and their associated transaction data. The blockchain still treats all sats as any other; the additional data makes no difference to their on-chain functionality.

How Are Ordinals Created?

Creating an Ordinal involves adding the wanted media content to an individual satoshi through a process called inscribing. The inscription of an Ordinal is the information one wants to attach to a particular token; this is the metadata determining the content of the NFT, such as a picture.

To attach such information, a user adds the media file to the witness data of a transaction by sending a single sat to a Taproot-enabled wallet. This might sound simple, but users must identify the sat they wish to send and ensure it isn’t used for the network fee. Remember, the bitcoin blockchain does not natively recognize Ordinals any differently from other sats.

At first, only operators of a full bitcoin node with a special wallet could manipulate sats in this way. Nowadays, there are plenty of tools associated with Ordinal wallets, and there are also marketplaces that streamline the process.

Although Ordinals are units of bitcoin, trading and transferring them is not the same as sending bitcoin or traditional NFTs. Ordinals need to be tracked and held separately from normal bitcoin so they are not mistakenly used in other transactions. This requires specialized Ordinal wallets with specific functionalities to handle Ordinals.

Further, normal NFT marketplaces do not support bitcoin assets. This has spawned a distinctive subsection of NFT marketplaces specializing in selling and promoting Ordinals.

NFTs vs Ordinals

The previous discussion makes it seem that Ordinals are the same as NFTs, but there are some key differences between traditional NFTs that new collectors need to understand.

  1. On-chain hosting: An inscription is housed directly in the data on the blockchain, unlike traditional NFTs which are usually just links connected to an externally hosted file. This makes inscriptions more secure and permanent because they are directly a part of the decentralized and immutable bitcoin ledger.
  2. Token type: A traditional NFT is not just an individual unit of a network currency like ether; it is its own type of token traded on the network. In this way, a traditional NFT could never be mistaken for a normal network unit and used for gas fees, etc.
  3. Scarcity: There will never be more than 21 million bitcoin. This gives a hard cap to the amount of Ordinals that can be created (although an extraordinarily high number). Traditional NFTs, on the other hand, can be minted in unlimited quantities.
  4. Smart contract support: Ordinals do not support complex smart contract functionalities such as detailed attributes, ownership rights, royalties, and other programmable functionalities that can trigger under specific conditions.

The Controversy

Ordinals bring a major branch of the Web3 industry firmly into the bitcoin ecosystem. It might seem that the bitcoin community would naturally welcome Ordinals with open arms. But any collector under this impression will be surprised at the heated debate and hatred for these new digital artifacts in the bitcoin community.

Bitcoin maximalists and conservatives have pushed back against the advent of Ordinals for clogging the bitcoin blockchain with meaningless transactions. Some even call it an attack on the bitcoin infrastructure.

The debate centers on two points. That the bitcoin network should only be used for financial transactions and that the additional transactions make bitcoin more expensive to use. Without a doubt, Ordinals increase the number of on-chain transactions, which can drive up fees. This only gets worse as Ordinals become more popular and accessible.

Proponents of Ordinals often point out that Layer 2 innovations can make bitcoin more scalable and accommodate Ordinal transactions. Regardless, some bitcoin maximalists feverishly oppose Ordinals and see NFTs broadly as corrupting cryptocurrency’s original mission.

It is the responsibility of the individual investor to decide where they stand on these issues. As the blockchain industry evolves, many solutions to these core problems are sure to emerge. In the meantime, early Ordinal adopters will continue to buy and hold their assets, hoping for untold future value.

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