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Ethereum gas fees cool down after May memecoin frenzy

Besides Ethereum, Bitcoin’s meme frenzy via Ordinals has steeply declined from its high in May.

The average gas fee — transaction fee — on the Ethereum network has cooled substantially in the first week of June after reaching a multimonth high in May, owing to the memecoin frenzy and much maximal extractable value (MEV) bot activities. 

The average gas fee has decreased to $7.34, an almost one-third drop from last month’s high of $20. In terms of gwei — a denomination of Ether (ETH) that represents one-billionth of one ETH — the daily median gas price has decreased to 24 gwei from a peak of almost 140 gwei last month, according to Dune Analytics.

Average gas fees on Ethereum in the past six months. Source: Dune Analytics

The memecoin frenzy started in late April and took center stage in May, leading to multiple new memecoins hitting the markets, such as Aped (APED), Bobo Coin (BOBO) and others. The dominance of memecoins in network activity was so high that it created an unusual shift in the top 10 gas-burning altcoins. Instead of ETH, Wrapped Ether (WETH), or Tether (USDT), memecoins such as Troll (TROLL), APED and BOBO became the top 10 spenders.

Another prominent reason for the rise in the Ethereum gas fees was the surging popularity of memecoins on decentralized platforms, with mainstream centralized exchanges taking longer to list them.

May was not just about the Ethereum memecoin frenzy; Bitcoin Ordinals also gained significant popularity. Ordinals enable decentralized storage of digital art on the Bitcoin blockchain. As a result, the Bitcoin network registered many new memecoins, with Pepecoin (PEPE) achieving a billion-dollar market capitalization.

Related: Bitcoin metrics to the moon: ATH for hash rate, daily transactions and Ordinals

Ordinals were introduced in January, and by the end of May, the number of Ordinal inscriptions on the Bitcoin blockchain had surpassed 10 million. Total fees paid for Ordinals inscriptions rose 700% in May to currently sit at 1,639 Bitcoin (BTC).

Total Ordinals inscriptions on the Bitcoin network. Source: Dune Analytics

With the memecoin frenzy dying down, Ethereum gas fees have cooled, and Ordinals inscriptions have also decreased significantly.

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Bitcoin Ordinals to bridge Ethereum NFTs with the launch of BRC-721E

The BRC-721E token standard was launched by the Ordinals market and the Bitcoin Miladys NFT collection, allowing traders to transfer their ERC-721 NFTs to Ordinals.

Bitcoin Ordinals are the latest layer-2 solution enabling decentralized storage of digital art on the Bitcoin blockchain. Ordinals will now allow users to migrate their Ethereum ERC-721-based nonfungible tokens (NFTs) to the Bitcoin blockchain with the launch of the BRC-721E standard.

The BRC-721E standard was jointly launched by the Ordinals market — an Ordinals-based marketplace — and the Bitcoin Miladys NFT collection. The new BRC-721E standard enables the conversion of immutable, verifiable ERC-721 NFTs to Ordinals. Initially, metadata is not stored on-chain, but users can store a lower-quality preview image and include a reference to the Ether (ETH) burn in the raw image data.

The migration process starts by burning the ERC-721 NFT with an ETH call function. The burning of the NFT is an irreversible process and acts as an on-chain inscription method. To claim the ETH burn on Bitcoin, the user must inscribe valid BRC-721E data, after which the bridged NFT will appear on a custom Ordinals market collection page with complete metadata.

The indexers that check the burned NFT data inscriptions ensure that a token has no more than one valid inscription and that the genesis address matches the burn transaction call data.

Related: Bitcoin Ordinals surpass 10M inscriptions as creator Rodarmor steps down

The Ordinals market claimed the fundamental principles of BRC-721E and the flexibility of the indexers allow for the protocol to evolve over time, despite the fact that metadata is initially not stored on-chain.

Bitcoin Ordinals has attracted widespread reaction from the crypto community since its launch in January 2023. The launch of the BRC-20 token standard in March created an experimental fungible token standard designed specifically for the Bitcoin blockchain. The combination of BRC-20 with Ordinals opened new gates for minting tokens on the Bitcoin blockchain, with the crypto community seeing the emergence of many popular BRC-20 tokens, such as Ordinals (ORDI), Vmpx (VMPX) and Pepecoin (PEPE).

The number of BRC-20 tokens has skyrocketed from a few hundred in its first week to over 25,000 at the time of publication. However, the rise of Ordinals and the new token minting era has not been unanimously well-received, with many Bitcoin (BTC) proponents criticizing the new method as inefficient and wasteful.

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Crypto hater Peter Schiff to drop Bitcoin Ordinals NFT art collection

Despite hating on crypto for years, and calling NFTs worthless and easy to replicate two years ago, Peter Schiff is set to release an NFT art collection on Bitcoin.

In what seems like a parody but isn't, Economist, gold proponent and avid crypto skeptic Peter Schiff has unveiled a collaborative nonfungible token (NFT) art collection on Bitcoin that will soon go up for auction.

The reaction from the crypto community has been mixed, with people generally baffled, amused, welcoming — especially Ordinals proponents — or keen to point out the apparent hypocrisy.

For years, Schiff has actively bashed crypto — especially Bitcoin (BTC) — at any chance he gets, with his arguments essentially revolving around BTC being a Ponzi-scheme that has no inherent value.

Despite all of that, Schiff unveiled the “Golden Triumph” collection via a May 27 Twitter thread, in collaboration with one of his “favorite artists” who goes by the pseudonym Market Price.

“This collaboration features the original painting ‘Golden Triumph’ as well as a series of prints and Ordinals inscribed on the Bitcoin blockchain,” he wrote.

Golden Triumph consists of one physical painting on an oil linen canvas depicting a human hand holding a bar of gold, 50 prints on archival paper depicting the same image and 50 digital versions inscribed as Ordinal NFTs on Bitcoin.

The collection will be sold via a two-part auction starting on June 2 and ending on June 9. For the Ordinals, the highest bidder will receive #1 of the collection, with the next 49 highest bidders receiving #2 to #50 in descending order.

It appears however that Schiff hasn’t done a full turnaround on BTC, and has instead woken up to a use case for blockchain technology; verifiable ownership of assets such as art via NFTs.

Commenting on Schiff’s Twitter post, user @LoneStartBitcoin asked: “So... it's valuable to put your ‘gold’ inscriptions on Bitcoin, but bitcoin [BTC] itself is not valuable?.”

“Correct,” Schiff responded.

Related: Peter Schiff blames ‘too much gov’t regulation’ for worsening financial crisis

Alongside his disdain for crypto, Schiff has also criticized NFTs on several occasions in the past.

For example, in a blog post from March 2021, Schiff described NFTs as “fake assets” that offer nothing other than ownership of a digital image that can be “replicated endlessly” online.

“But even as the owner of the image, you won’t be able to control access to it. The file has been copied thousands of times, so anyone with access to the internet can look at it as much as you,” he wrote.

The sharp change in sentiment follows a similar vein to former U.S. president Donald Trump, who has also aggressively slammed crypto on multiple occasions before getting involved with NFTs.

Back in December, Trump teased a “major announcement” which MAGA supporters thought was politically related, before unveiling the licensed Trump Digital Trading Cards collection.

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Thirteen years after first Bitcoin purchase, layer-2 solutions struggle to gain traction

In an interview with Cointelegraph, Trust Machines CEO Muneeb Ali explains how Ordinals’ hype could support Bitcoin by attracting more developers and capital to layer-2 solutions.

Thirteen years after the world’s first Bitcoin (BTC) pizza purchase, the pioneer cryptocurrency network faces a new wave of disruption thanks to the advent of Ordinals, the recently launched protocol that allows adding digital content such as art — i.e. nonfungible tokens — in the Bitcoin blockchain. 

Since the launch of Ordinal NFTs on the Bitcoin mainnet in January 2023, the network's traffic has increased significantly, spiking transaction costs and spotlighting issues surrounding Bitcoin.

Bitcoin mempool, the “waiting area” for incoming transactions on the network, has over 286,000 pending transactions at the time of writing. While the number is lower than the peak of 400,000 clogged transactions at the beginning of the month, it is still historically high.

In an interview with Cointelegraph’s Joe Hall during last week’s Bitcoin Builders, Muneeb Ali, the CEO of Trust Machines, explained how Ordinals NFT’s hype could support Bitcoin in attracting more developers and capital to layer-2 solutions.

“Bitcoin is the largest asset. We should have the best devs, the best scientists trying to work on Bitcoin layer-2s,” said Ali. He believes the fee spike provided clear evidence to developers and investors that layer-2 protocols for Bitcoin are in demand.

Related: Ordinals good or bad for Bitcoin? Supporters and opposers raise voices

The purpose of layer-2 solutions is to improve the scalability, privacy, and other characteristics of layer-1 blockchains, such as the Bitcoin network. Ali's Trust Machines is a layer-agnostic ecosystem for Bitcoin applications, building on various layers in the Bitcoin network.

Total number of transactions on the Bitcoin blockchain in the past 12 months. Source: Blockchain.com

There is a $500 billion market potential untapped on the BTC network, claims Ali, referring to BTC’s current market capitalization of $521 billion. Products, users and the amount of Bitcoin sent on the Lightning Network (LN), the layer-2 payment solution built on top of its blockchain, has skyrocketed in 2023. Despite the figures, the Bitcoin space continues to struggle for developers, and there are no entities “playing the game,” explained Ali.

Bitcoin, the CEO says, is “so decent,” a benefit that can still hinder the development of a solid developer ecosystem. “There is no marketing department, there is no foundation, there’s no incentive. That’s why it is grassroots decentralized and most decentralized driven.” 

Increasing Bitcoin fees may attract more developers, but won’t unlock its global potential if layer-2 solutions don’t gain traction as a category for venture capitalists, defends Ali. “If collectively, Bitcoin layer-2s emerge as a very attractive category, and there’s better education around why it is interesting, it is a narrative as well. I think the community can have a very grassroots narrative, and there’s a ton of support for Bitcoin out there.”

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Ordinals sends LTC and DOGE network activity surging for 3 straight weeks

Move over Bitcoin, Ordinals on Litecoin and Dogecoin have unleashed a frenzy of transactions.

What began with developer Casey Rodarmor creating the Ordinals protocol to “inscribe” text and imagery on the Bitcoin (BTC) network has now made its way to Litecoin (LTC) and Dogecoin (DOGE), sending transaction volume on thosechains surging for the better part of a month. 

Recent network activity on Litecoin and Dogecoin networks. Source: BitInfoCharts

On May 18, Dogecoin reached a new transaction volume record, with 1.2 million transactions in a single 24-hour period, according to data from BitInfoCharts. Similarly, on May 10, Litecoin reached its highest ever daily transaction volume with 584,000 transactions.

Ordinals first arrived on Litecoin after pseudonymous Twitter user Indigo Nakamoto offered 5 LTC — worth approximately $500 at the time — to anyone who could “port” the Ordinals protocol to the Litecoin network.

Some eight days later, on Feb. 19, software engineer Anthony Guerrera succeeded and launched the Litecoin Ordinals protocol. In a similar way, DOGE enthusiasts copied the Ordinals protocol to create the same functionality on Dogecoin, choosing to name the new protocol “Doginals”.

However, what really drove network activity on Litecoin and Dogecoin to new heights was the later introduction of the respective LRC-20 and DRC-20 token standards in early May, which allowed users to create and issue entirely new memecoins on the two networks.

The monumental influx of activity on LTC and DOGE came around the same time that the Ordinals inscription on the Bitcoin network went into overdrive, with a record 400,000 daily inscriptions on May 10.

Ordinals inscriptions on Bitcoin since December 2022. Source: Dune Analytics

The uptick in Bitcoin Ordinals inscriptions can be directly attributed to the introduction of the BRC-20 token standard, which — according to data from Ordinals scanner brc-20.io — has seen more than 24,000 new tokens minted on the Bitcoin blockchain.

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Bitcoin’s Ordinal Inscriptions Surpass 7 Million Mark, Fueling the Trend’s Unstoppable Momentum

Bitcoin’s Ordinal Inscriptions Surpass 7 Million Mark, Fueling the Trend’s Unstoppable MomentumOn May 15, 2023, the number of Ordinal inscriptions surpassed the 7 million mark and as of 9:00 a.m. Eastern Time on Tuesday morning, 7,204,882 Ordinal inscriptions have been added to the Bitcoin blockchain. Miners have collected 1,324 bitcoin in fees by confirming inscription transactions which equate to roughly $35.86 million in added onchain fees. […]

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Ordinals and BRC-20 will disappear in a matter of months, JAN3 CEO says

The hype around Bitcoin Ordinals and BRC-20 tokens is unsustainable and will fade away in a matter of months, according to JAN3 CEO Samson Mow.

The latest hype around Bitcoin (BTC) Ordinals and BRC-20 tokens is unsustainable and will fade away in a matter of months, according to JAN3 CEO Samson Mow. 

“These guys are basically paying massive amounts of fees that go directly to Bitcoin miners, and there is no way this can be sustained," Mow said in an exclusive interview with Cointelegraph. 

"They will fade away after even months, let's not talk about years here," he continued. 

Growing activity around Ordinals and BRC-20 – a crypto technology that allows users to mint fungible and non-fungible tokens on the Bitcoin blockchain – is the main cause provoking a spike in transaction fees, which resulted in the congestion of the Bitcoin network.

Related: Bitcoin BRC-20 token standard becomes new destination for meme tokens

While many members of the Bitcoin community see Ordinals as a use-case that could boost Bitcoin adoption, Mow considers them just as spam clogging the network. 

"These are just short-term money grabs similar to most things on competing chains like Ethereum and Solana," he pointed out. 

To Mow, mass adoption of Bitcoin will happen because of its use case as a saving technology and as a means of exchange, not because of “people minting JPEGs and sticking them in the chain.”

To learn more about Mow's argument against Ordinals, watch the full interview on our YouTube channel. Don’t forget to subscribe!

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Ordinals good or bad for Bitcoin? Supporters and opposers raise voices

Bitcoin miners, exchanges and layer-2 builders have different reasons to support or oppose Bitcoin Ordinals.

Bitcoin Ordinals, a technology that enables adding text, images and code on a satoshi — the smallest unit of Bitcoin (BTC) — continues to inspire debate among the Bitcoin community.

Soon after the introduction of Bitcoin Ordinals in January 2023, the technology’s opponents began to raise concerns over its perceived flaws, citing issues like rising transaction costs and slower speeds.

Conversely, Ordinals supporters said that the tech provides more opportunities, improves decentralization and ensures freedom of speech.

As the number of Bitcoin Ordinals inscriptions doubled from 2.5 million to over 5 million in just eight days, Cointelegraph looks at the technology and the controversy surrounding it.

Cost, speed and security vulnerabilities

The undeniable and undesired impact of Ordinals on Bitcoin’s network capacity and scalability is one of the biggest arguments by Bitcoin purists, who believe that BTC is supposed to exclusively follow Satoshi Nakamoto’s prescribed peer-to-peer payment mission.

The ongoing rise in BRC-20 activity — which utilizes Ordinal inscriptions — has triggered a sharp increase in BTC transaction fees. The trading frenzy of BRC-20 memecoins like Pepe (PEPE) has driven Bitcoin transaction costs to the highest levels since 2021.

As users continue pouring BTC into minting new tokens settled via Ordinals inscriptions, the blockchain has also experienced massive congestion. On May 7, the Binance exchange temporarily closed BTC withdrawals due to 400,000 pending transactions clogging the mempool.

Enrico Rubboli, CEO of Bitcoin layer-2 sidechain Mintlayer, told Cointelegraph that the technology behind Ordinals is “heavily flawed” and doesn’t follow the “axioms of the core Bitcoin community.”

“The developers of the standard and the tools are not affiliated with Bitcoin, they are anonymous, and their software has not been thoroughly tested in this application,” Rubboli said. The exec also believes that Ordinals could cause additional regulatory scrutiny for Bitcoin, as new BRC-20 tokens may be considered unregulated securities.

Rubboli further argued that, with Ordinals, the protocol is vulnerable to scams. “The entire ecosystem was set up to be confusing and misleading,” he said, arguing that BRC-20 was created to “leech off the popularity of Ethereum’s ERC-20 token.”

He further emphasized that the anonymous BRC-20 creator Domo warned users in the first place that the tokens were “worthless.” Before launching BRC-20, Domo took to Twitter to stress that the token is “simply a fun experiment.”

“These will be worthless. Please do not waste money mass minting,” the BRC-20 creator wrote.

Arguments from Bitcoin Ordinals supporters

Bitcoin Ordinal’s capability to unlock new value on the Bitcoin blockchain is a significant counterargument by supporters of Ordinals. Some Ordinals defenders also believe that issues like higher transaction costs will fade with time.

“Ordinals is a beneficial exploration for Bitcoin application and helps to unlock greater value in the Bitcoin network,” F2Pool chief marketing officer Li Qingfei told Cointelegraph, adding:

“The network congestion it brings should be temporary, and there will be good solutions to solve the problem and reduce transaction costs, and increase transaction speeds, just like the Lightning Network.”

Li claimed that the increase in transaction fees will encourage more miners to participate in maintaining the network after Bitcoin’s upcoming halving in 2024. As an active proponent of Ordinals, F2Pool launched a special nonfungible token series called “10² Islands” to celebrate its 10th anniversary.

Roundtable21 co-founder Brandon Dallmann echoed Li’s remarks, stating that BRC-20 is currently being stress-tested against Ethereum’s ERC-20 protocol. “Since it is not complete yet, the Bitcoin network is unable to keep up with the demand and is getting congested,” he told Cointelegraph.

Dallmann also advised users to utilize multiple crypto platforms instead of keeping the entire stake on just one to prevent issues caused by congestion on the Bitcoin network.

Some community members asked why one should hinder Bitcoin’s transformation from “magic internet money” to a more complex technology.

“I see the backlash from many BTC purists, but I don’t think that anyone should use their platform to attempt to censor transactions and attempt to discern between what is a ‘valid’ and ‘invalid’ transaction on any network,” AngelBlock founder Alex Strzesniewski told Cointelegraph.

Many Ordinals supporters have also noted the technology’s contribution to the freedom of speech. “I know everyone hates ordinals, but whether it’s text or images, the ability to publish uncensorable information on the Bitcoin time chain effectively makes speech uncensorable worldwide forever,” Bitcoin observer BitPaine wrote on Twitter.

Perspective matters most

Despite the clashing perspectives between Ordinals’ supporters and detractors, it’s important to note that much of the reasoning for or against them largely depends on perspective.

For example, for layer-2 tech builders, it is only natural to oppose Bitcoin’s base layer developments like Ordinals. In contrast, miners will likely not oppose something that could increase their revenues.

Bitcoin Ordinals are hardly changing anything for hodlers, who most likely won’t care much about transaction fees or the size of the mempool. However, they are causing many issues for traders and other market participants like crypto exchanges.

Whether or not Ordinals are here to stay, the community has yet to see the technology’s full potential and its true consequences.

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Bitcoin ordinals hit Binance NFT Marketplace in latest update

The Binance NFT marketplace announced that users will soon be able to trade and purchase Bitcoin NFTs on its platform using already-existing wallets.

Bitcoin ordinals — also known as Bitcoin NFTs — have made their way into the limelight of the Web3 space, as more marketplaces continue to adopt and offer digital assets. 

On May 9, the cryptocurrency exchange Binance announced that it will support Bitcoin ordinals on its NFT marketplace in late May. The development will expand Binance’s multichain NFT ecosystem to include the Bitcoin network.

Previously the Binance NFT market integrated with other decentralized networks, including BNB Chain, Ethereum and Polygon.

Mayur Kamat, the head of product at Binance, commented on broadening the offerings in the marketplace and Bitcoin’s (BTC) crypto legacy:

“Bitcoin is the OG of crypto.”

The update allows Binance users to purchase and trade Bitcoin ordinals from existing Binance accounts. According to the announcement, the update will also include royalty support and “additional revenue generating opportunities” for those creating Bitcoin ordinals.

Related: Bitcoin metrics to the moon: ATH for hash rate, daily transactions and Ordinals

Prior to Binance’s announcement, the cryptocurrency exchange OKX similarly announced in late April that it was bringing Bitcoin ordinals to its marketplace and wallet ecosystem. Initially, OKX users could view and store ordinals using their accounts, with the option to mint ordinals being hinted at in the future, according to Haider Rafique, the chief marketing officer at OKX.

The Bitcoin NFTs are also available on marketplaces such as Magic Eden, which integrated the feature back in March.

Ordinals reach 3 million inscriptions. Source: Dune

According to recent data, inscriptions of Bitcoin ordinals have been on the rise in recent months. On April 2, Bitcoin ordinals reached 58,179 inscriptions — up 83.5% from the previous month. However, on May 1, the total number of Bitcoin ordinal inscriptions skyrocketed to exceed 3 million.

Nonetheless, they remain a controversial topic within the crypto community, with Bitcoin maximalists criticizing them for deviating from Bitcoin’s original peer-to-peer ethos.

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Ordinals inscriptions approach 4.8M, nearly doubling in just over a week

The BRC-20 token frenzy has seen the number of Ordinals inscriptions on the Bitcoin network soar 92% in just eight days.

The number of Ordinals inscriptions on the Bitcoin (BTC) network has witnessed another meteoric rise, almost doubling from 2.5 million to 4.78 million in just the last eight days. 

While the Ordinals protocol was initially used to mint images as non-fungible tokens (NFTs), users began to realize that they could use text-based inscriptions to create fungible tokens in a similar way to those minted via the ERC-20 token standard on the Ethereum (ETH) network.

The total number of Bitcoin Ordinals inscriptions since December 14. Source: Dune Analytics

These text-based inscriptions, now popularized as the BRC-20 token standard, have been the main cause of the massive uptick in Ordinals inscriptions on the Bitcoin blockchain.

As highlighted by Glassnode co-founder and chief technology officer Rafael Schultze-Kraft on Twitter, text-based inscriptions are now the most popular form of Ordinals inscription, with more than 2.8 million text-based inscriptions as of May 5.

More recent data from popular blockchain data hub Dune Analytics shows that since April 25, the overwhelming majority (99%) of all new Ordinals inscriptions have been text-based.

Ordinals inscriptions by type since December 14. Source: Dune Analytics

According to brc-20.io, a new tool that allows users to track BRC-20 tokens, there are currently a total of 14,200 new tokens hosted on the Bitcoin blockchain. Counted among the most popular Bitcoin-based tokens are “ordi”, “nals” and even a Bitcoin-based version of the now-notorious memecoin Pepe (PEPE) being listed at number 3 by total market cap.

The total number of BRC-20 tokens currently available. Source: brc20.io.

While the total market cap of BRC-20 tokens currently hover around the $700 million mark, digital asset investment firm Galaxy Digital asserts that the market for “Bitcoin NFTs” may reach $4.5 billion by 2025.

Related: Bitcoin Ordinals community debates fix after inscription validation bug

The rise of Ordinals over the last few months has continued to spark debate around whether Ordinals are ultimately a positive for the Bitcoin ecosystem.

Some Bitcoin proponents, such as Dan Held, claim that Ordinals offers a wider spread of financial use cases for Bitcoin, while more hardline Bitcoiners argue that Ordinals stray from the original vision of Satoshi Nakamoto, who intended for Bitcoin to be used as an electronic, peer-to-peer cash system.

Meanwhile, miners have enjoyed an enormous influx of revenue due to the transaction fees related to the burst of new activity on the network.

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