Bitcoin (BTC) miners have earned nearly $600,000 in two months from a new controversial NFT protocol called Ordinals that has triggered a surge in user activity.
Ordinals allow users to inscribe data in the form of images and other media types in newly mined blocks on the Bitcoin blockchain that's otherwise largely used for peer-to-peer monetary transactions.
Since the launch of Ordinals in mid-December, however, users have inscribed nearly 74,000 NFTs into the Bitcoin blockchain, earning miners a cumulative $574,000 in BTC transaction fees to date, data from Dune Analytics shows.
These NFTs include "digital artifacts" stemming from the derivative projects of Ethereum's CryptoPunks and Bored Ape Yacht Club collection in February.
The NFT community is moving to BTC, where Ordinals have brought true scarcity to collectibles. I forever inscribed “The Blonde Don” BAYC #1626 on the world's scarcest and most secure chain burning him off ETH forever using TeleBurn.It's done. Over. Not coming back to ETH. pic.twitter.com/jmKpSSPybm
The Ordinals protocol was made possible by Segregated Witness (SegWit) and Taproot, Bitcoin's network soft fork upgrades from 2017 and 2021, respectively.
Related: Ordinals protocol sparks debate over the place for NFTs in the Bitcoin ecosystem
For instance, the SegWit update effectively increased Bitcoin's block capacity up to 4MB.
Similarly, the Taproot update helps batch and verify multiple transactions together as long as their size does not exceed 4 MB. This feature allows the inscription of data such as images and videos in Bitcoin blocks.
The advent of Ordinals has coincided with Bitcoin's mean block size jumping from its typical average of 1.5-2MB to between 3 and 3.5MB in early February.
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