* [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers
@ 2022-02-23 0:43 Casey Rodarmor
2022-02-23 7:02 ` damian
0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread
From: Casey Rodarmor @ 2022-02-23 0:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: bitcoin-dev
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Good afternoon list,
I've been working on a scheme of stable public identifiers that can be
used for a variety of purposes.
The scheme is extremely simple and does not require protocol-level
changes, but since different applications and wallets might use such
identifiers, standardizing and publishing the scheme as a BIP seems
warranted. The draft-BIP is hosted on GitHub, as well as reproduced
below:
https://github.com/casey/ord/blob/master/bip.mediawiki
Briefly, newly mined satoshis are sequentially numbered in the order in
which they are mined. These numbers are called "ordinal numbers" or
"ordinals". When satoshis are spent in a transaction, the input satoshi
ordinal numbers are assigned to output satoshis using a simple
first-in-first-out algorithm.
At any time, the output that contains an ordinal can be determined, and
the public key associated with that output can be used to sign
challenges or perform actions related to the ordinal that it contains.
Such identifiers could be used for a variety of purposes, such as user
accounts, PKI roots, or to issue stablecoins or NFTs. The scheme
composes nicely with other Bitcoin applications, such as the Lightning
Network or state chains.
I'm also working on an command-line tool that builds an index of ordinal
ranges to answer queries about the whereabouts of a particular ordinal,
or the ordinals contained in a particular output:
https://github.com/casey/ord/
The index is well tested but needs to be optimized before it can index
the main chain in a reasonable amount of time and space. It's written in
Rust, by myself and Liam Scalzulli.
I'm eager for feedback, both here, and on GitHub:
https://github.com/casey/ord/discussions/126
Best regards,
Casey Rodarmor
PS After finishing the current draft, I discovered that a variation of
this scheme was independently proposed a little under a decade ago by
jl2012 on BitcoinTalk:
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=117224.0
---
<pre>
BIP: ?
Layer: Applications
Title: Ordinal Numbers
Author: Casey Rodarmor <casey@rodarmor.com>
Comments-Summary: No comments yet.
Comments-URI: https://github.com/casey/ord/discussions/126
Status: Draft
Type: Informational
Created: 2022-02-02
License: PD
</pre>
== Introduction ==
=== Abstract ===
This document defines a scheme for numbering and tracking satoshis
across transactions. These numbers, "ordinal numbers" in the language of
this document, can be used as a useful primitive for a diverse range of
applications, including NFTs, reputation systems, and Lightning
Network-compatible stablecoins.
=== Copyright ===
This work is placed in the public domain.
=== Motivation ===
Bitcoin has no notion of a stable, public account or identity. Addresses
are single-use, and wallet accounts, while permanent, are not publicly
visible. Additionally, the use of addresses or public keys as
identifiers precludes private key rotation or transfer of ownership.
Many applications, some of which are detailed in this document, require
stable, public identifiers tracking identity or ownership. This proposal
is motivated by the desire to provide such a system of identifiers.
== Description ==
=== Design ===
Every satoshi is serially numbered, starting at 0, in the order in which
it is mined. These numbers are termed "ordinal numbers", or "ordinals",
as they are ordinal numbers in the mathematical sense. The word
"ordinal" is nicely unambiguous, as it is not used elsewhere in the
Bitcoin protocol[0].
The ordinal numbers of transaction inputs are transferred to outputs in
first-in-first-out order, according to the size and order of the
transactions inputs and outputs.
If a transaction is mined with the same transaction ID as outputs
currently in the UTXO set, following the behavior of Bitcoin Core, the
new transaction outputs displace the older UTXO set entries, destroying
the ordinals contained in any unspent outputs of the first transaction.
For the purposes of the assignment algorithm, the coinbase transaction
is considered to have an implicit input equal in size to the subsidy,
followed by an input for every fee-paying transaction in the block, in
the order that those transactions appear in the block. The implicit
subsidy input carries the block's newly created ordinals. The implicit
fee inputs carry the ordinals that were paid as fees in the block's
transactions.
Underpaying the subsidy does not change the ordinal numbers of satoshis
mined in subsequent blocks. Ordinals depend only on how many satoshis
could have been mined, not how many actually were.
At any given time, the output in which an ordinal resides can be
identified. The public key associated with this output can be used to
sign messages, such as ownership challenges, concerning to the ordinals
it contains. The specification of a standardized message format for such
purposes is deferred to a later BIP.
Ordinal aware software should not mix outputs containing meaningful
ordinals with outputs used for other purposes to avoid inadvertent loss
of valuable ordinals, or privacy leaks allowing links between funds. For
this reason, ordinal aware software using BIP-32 hierarchical
deterministic key generation should use a key derivation path specific
to ordinals.
The suggested key derivation path is `m/44'/7303780'/0'/0`. This
suggested derivation path has not been standardized and may change in
the future[1].
=== Specification ===
Ordinals are created and assigned with the following algorithm:
# subsidy of block at given height
def subsidy(height):
return 50 * 100_000_000 >> int(height / 210_000)
# first ordinal of subsidy of block at given height
def first_ordinal(height):
start = 0
for height in range(height):
start += subsidy(height)
return start
# assign ordinals in given block
def assign_ordinals(block):
first = first_ordinal(block.height)
last = first + subsidy(block.height)
coinbase_ordinals = list(range(first, last))
for transaction in block.transactions[1:]:
ordinals = []
for input in transaction.inputs:
ordinals.extend(input.ordinals)
for output in transaction.outputs:
output.ordinals = ordinals[:output.value]
del ordinals[:output.value]
coinbase_ordinals.extend(ordinals)
for output in block.transaction[0].outputs:
output.ordinals = coinbase_ordinals[:output.value]
del coinbase_ordinals[:output.value]
=== Terminology and Notation ===
Ordinals may be written as the ordinal number followed by the
Romance-language ordinal indicator °, for example 13°.
A satpoint may be used to indicate the location of an ordinal within an
output. A satpoint consists of an outpoint, i.e., a transaction ID and
output index, with the addition of the offset of the ordinal within that
output. For example, if the ordinal in question is at offset 6 in the
first output of a transaction can be written as:
680df1e4d43016571e504b0b142ee43c5c0b83398a97bdcfd94ea6f287322d22:0:6
A slot may be used to indicate the output of an ordinal without
referring to a transaction ID, by substituting the block height and
transaction index within the block for the transaction ID. It is written
as a dotted quad. For example, the ordinal at offset 100 in the output
at offset 1, in the coinbase transaction of block 83 can be written as:
83.0.1.100
Satoshis with ordinals that are not valuable or notable can be referred
to as cardinal, as their identity does not matter, only the amount. A
cardinal output is one whose ordinals are unimportant for the purpose at
hand, for example an output used only to provide padding to avoid
creating a transaction with an output below the dust limit.
== Discussion ==
=== Rationale ===
Ordinal numbers are designed to be orthogonal to other aspects of the
Bitcoin protocol, and can thus be used in conjunction with other
layer-one techniques and applications, even ones that were not designed
with ordinal numbers in mind.
Ordinal satoshis can be secured using current and future script types.
They can be held by single-signature wallets, multi-signature wallets,
time-locked, and height-locked in all the usual ways.
This orthogonality also allows them to be used with layer-two
applications. A stablecoin issuer can promise to allow redemption of
specific ranges of ordinals for $1 United States dollar each. Lightning
Network nodes can then be used to create a USD-denominated Lightning
Network, using existing software with very modest modifications.
By assigning ordinal numbers to all satoshis without need for an
explicit creation step, the anonymity set of ordinal number users is
maximized.
Since an ordinal number has an output that contains it, and an output
has a public key that controls it, the owner of an ordinal can respond
to challenges by signing messages using the public key associated with
the controlling UTXO. Additionally, an ordinal can change hands, or its
private key can be rotated without a change of ownership, by
transferring it to a new output.
Ordinals require no changes to blocks, transactions, or network
protocols, and can thus be immediately adopted, or ignored, without
impacting existing users.
Ordinals do not have an explicit on-chain footprint. However, a valid
objection is that adoption of ordinals will increase demand for outputs,
and thus increase the size of the UTXO set that full nodes must track.
See the objections section below.
The ordinal number scheme is extremely simple. The specification above
is 15 lines of code.
Ordinals are fairly assigned. They are not premined, and are assigned
proportionally to existing bitcoin holders.
Ordinals are as granular as possible, as bitcoin is not capable of
tracking ownership of sub-satoshi values.
=== Transfer and the Dust Limit ===
Any ordinal transfer can be accomplished in a single transaction, but
the resulting transaction may contain outputs below the dust limit, and
thus be non-standard and difficult to get included in a block. Consider
a scenario where Alice owns an output containing the range of ordinals
[0,10], the current dust limit is 5 satoshis, and Alice wishes to send
send ordinals 4° and 6° to Bob, but retain ordinal 5°. Alice could
construct a transaction with three outputs of size 5, 1, and 5,
containing ordinals [0,4], 5, and [6,10]. The second output is under the
dust limit, and so such a transaction would be non-standard.
This transfer, and indeed any transfer, can be accomplished by breaking
the transfer into multiple transactions, with each transaction
performing one or more splits and merging in padding outputs as needed.
To wit, Alice could perform the desired transfer in two transactions.
The first transaction would send ordinals [0,4] to Bob, and return as
change ordinals [5,10] to Alice. The second transaction would take as
inputs an output of at least 4 satoshis, the change input, and an
additional input of at least one satoshi; and create an output of size 5
to Bob's address, and the remainder as a change output. Both
transactions avoid creating any non-standard outputs, but still
accomplish the same desired transfer of ordinals.
=== Objections ===
- Privacy: Ordinal numbers are public and thus reduce user privacy.
The applications using ordinal numbers required them to be public, and
reduce the privacy of only those users that decide to use them.
Fungibility: Ordinal numbers reduce the fungibility of Bitcoin, as
ordinals received in a transaction may carry with them some public
history.
As anyone can send anyone else any ordinals, any reasonable person
will assume that a new owner of a particular ordinal cannot be
understood to be the old owner, or have any particular relationship
with the old owner.
- Congestion: Adoption of ordinal numbers will increase the demand for
transactions, and drive up fees.
Since Bitcoin requires the development of a robust fee market, this is
a strong positive of the proposal.
- UTXO set bloat: Adoption of ordinal numbers will increase the demand
for entries in the UTXO set, and thus increase the size of the UTXO
set, which all full nodes are required to track.
The dust limit, which makes outputs with small values difficult to
create, should encourage users to create non-dust outputs, and to
clean them up once they no longer have use for the ordinals that they
contain.
=== Security ===
The public key associated with an ordinal may change. This requires
actively following the blockchain to keep up with key changes, and
requires care compared to a system where public keys are static.
However, a system with static public keys suffers from an inability for
keys to be rotated or accounts to change hands.
Ordinal-aware software must avoid destroying ordinals by unintentionally
relinquishing them in a transaction, either to a non-controlled output
or by using them as fees.
=== Privacy considerations ===
Ordinals are opt-in, and should not impact the privacy of existing
users.
Ordinals are themselves public, however, this is required by the fact
that many of the applications that they are intended to enable require
public identifiers.
Ordinal aware software should never mix satoshis which might have some
publicly visible data associated with their ordinals with satoshis
intended for use in payments or savings, since this would associate that
publicly visible data with the users otherwise pseudonymous wallet
outputs.
=== Fungibility considerations ===
Since any ordinal can be sent to any address at any time, ordinals that
are transferred, even those with some public history, should be
considered to be fungible with other satoshis with no such history.
=== Backward compatibility ===
Ordinal numbers are fully backwards compatible and require no changes to
the bitcoin network.
=== Compatibility with Existing and Envisaged Applications ===
Ordinals are compatible with many current and planned applications.
==== Covenants ====
Since ordinals are borne by outputs, they can be encumbered by
covenants. BIP-119* specifies OP_CTV, which constraints outputs by
pre-committing to a spending transaction template. This template commits
to the number, value, and order of spending transaction outputs, which
allows constraining how specific ordinals are spent in future
transactions.
https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0119.mediawiki
==== The Lightning Network ====
The Lightning Network cannot be used to selectively transfer individual
non-fungible ordinals, however it can be used to transfer arbitrary
amounts of fungible ordinals. Channels can be created with inputs whose
ordinals are all colored coins of the same type, for example colored
coins honored for redemption by a stablecoin issuer. These channels can
be used to conduct instant, low-fee USD-denominated off-chain payments,
and would require only modest changes to existing Lightning Network
nodes.
On channel close, fees would have to be paid by child-pays-for-parent,
to avoid paying stablecoin ordinals as fees.
==== Opendimes and Casascius coins ====
Physical transfer of ordinals can be facilitated by loading them onto
bitcoin bearer artifacts, such as Opendimes and Casascius coins.
==== RGB ====
RGB is a proposed scheme for using sequences of single-use seals to
define state transitions of off-chain, client-side-validated state
machines, for example smart contract platforms. Such chains of
single-use seals could be addressed by an ordinal contained in the
output that starts the chain of single-use seals.
https://rgb-org.github.io/
==== State Chains ====
The state chain proposal facilitates off-chain transfer of whole
outputs, which could contain ordinals with specific meanings, for
example stable coins or NFTs, allowing off-chain transfer of such
digital assets.
https://github.com/RubenSomsen/rubensomsen.github.io/blob/master/img/statechains.pdf
== Applications ==
=== Accounts and Authentication ===
Ordinal numbers can serve as the basis for account and authentication
schemes. The account issuer associates a newly created account with an
ordinal number in an output controlled by the account owner. The account
owner can then log in and take actions related to the account by signing
messages with the private key associated with the public key associated
with the output that contains the account ordinal. This key is only
known to the account owner, preventing unauthorized access.
By transferring the ordinal to a new output, the owner can rotate their
private key, or transfer the account to a new owner. Transferring an
ordinal requires creating a transaction signed by the current outputs
private key, preventing unauthorized transfer of accounts.
=== Colored Coins ===
Ordinals can be used as the basis for colored coin schemes. Unlike other
colored coin schemes which use additional outputs or require
manipulation of other parts of a transaction, ordinal-based colored coin
schemes can take advantage of the full range of available script types,
and other base-layer bitcoin features.
=== The DNS ===
The DNS root of trust could be defined not as a specific set of public
keys, but as a specific set of ordinals, which would allow for easy key
rotation and updates to the set.
=== Name Services ===
A scheme, not described in this document, could be used to assign names
to ordinals based on their number. These names could then be used as
account names. Many such names would be gibberish, but many would be
human readable. A scheme which enumerated strings of the ASCII
characters `a` through `z` would assign as names all length-10 and
shorter permutations of these characters.
=== NFTs ===
An artist can issue an NFT by signing a message containing a hash of a
work of art that they have created, along with the number of a
particular ordinal. The owner of that ordinal is the owner of that NFT,
allowing ownership to be proven, and the NFT to be bought and sold, and
otherwise change hands.
Such NFTs could be used for art, in-game assets, membership systems, or
any other kind of digital asset.
The signed message, which may contain arbitrary attributes and metadata,
is not sensitive and can be widely disseminated and replicated, to
ensure it is not lost.
Scarcity of such NFTs can be guaranteed by including in the NFT messages
the total number of NFTs to be issued. If this promise is violated, the
set of issued NFTs serves as an easy-to-verify fraud proof that the
issuance limit was exceeded.
A judicious NFT issuer will create a new private key to sign a new set
of NFTs and destroy it afterwards, to ensure the limited nature of the
NFT set. Multi-party-computation can be used to provide additional
assurances that overissuance cannot occur.
=== PKI ===
Instead of individual public keys serving as roots of trust for PKI
systems, individual ordinals could be used, allowing for key rotation.
=== Rare Sats ===
Ordinal numbers are unique, which might encourage collectors and
speculators to collect particular ordinals. Examples of potentially
collectable ordinals include:
* The first ordinal in a block, difficulty adjustment period, or halving
epoch.
* Ordinals consisting only of a single repeating digit.
* Ordinals with a large number of 8s, commonly held to be a lucky digit.
* Low ordinals mined early in bitcoin's history.
* Ordinals that were part of unusual blocks or transactions.
=== Reputation Systems ===
Ordinal numbers can serve as the basis for persistent reputation
systems, for example one of Lightning Network node operators. Unlike the
current system of associating reputation with public keys, an
ordinal-based reputation system allows for key rotation and reputation
transfer.
=== Stablecoins ===
A stablecoin issuer could promise to allow redemption of a range of
ordinals for one United States dollar each, minus the price of one
satoshi times the number of satoshis so redeemed. Such ordinals could be
transacted on-chain and on a slightly modified Lightning Network, as
well as other layers.
=== Voting and DAOs ===
A DAO or other organization may decide to allocate voting rights
proportionally to ownership of a predetermined range of ordinals. Voting
rights can thus be made transferable, and voting may be conducted by
signing messages using public keys associated with the outputs holding
vote-bearing ordinals.
== Reference implementation ==
This document, along with an implementation of an ordinal index that
tracks the position of ordinals in the main chain, is available on
GitHub: https://github.com/casey/ord
== References ==
A variation of this scheme was independently invented a decade ago by
jl2012 on BitcoinTalk: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=117224.0
For other colored coin proposals see the Bitcoin Wiki entry:
https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Colored_Coins
For aliases, an implementation of short on-chain identifiers, see BIP
15.
[0] With the exception of being word #1405 in the BIP-39 Portuguese word
list. Me perdoe!
[1] 7303780 is the decimal representation of the ASCII string 'ord'.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers
2022-02-23 0:43 [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers Casey Rodarmor
@ 2022-02-23 7:02 ` damian
2022-02-23 7:10 ` Casey Rodarmor
` (2 more replies)
0 siblings, 3 replies; 15+ messages in thread
From: damian @ 2022-02-23 7:02 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Casey Rodarmor, Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
Well done, your bip looks well presented for discussion. You say to
number each satoshi created? For a 50 BTC block reward that is
5,000,000,000 ordinal numbers, and when some BTC is transferred to
another UTXO how do you determine which ordinal numbers, say if I create
a transaction to pay-to another UTXO. The system sounds expensive
eventually to cope with approximately 2,100,000,000,000,000 ordinals. If
I understand ordinals 0 to 5,000,000,000 as assigned to the first
Bitcoin created from mining block-reward. Say if I send some Bitcoin to
another UTXO then first-in-first-out algorithm splits those up to assign
1 to 100,000,000 to the 1 BTC that I sent, and 100,000,001 to
5,000,000,000 are assigned to the change plus if any fee?-DA.
On 2022-02-23 11:43, Casey Rodarmor via bitcoin-dev wrote:
> Briefly, newly mined satoshis are sequentially numbered in the order
> in
> which they are mined. These numbers are called "ordinal numbers" or
> "ordinals". When satoshis are spent in a transaction, the input
> satoshi
> ordinal numbers are assigned to output satoshis using a simple
> first-in-first-out algorithm.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers
2022-02-23 7:02 ` damian
@ 2022-02-23 7:10 ` Casey Rodarmor
2022-02-23 7:24 ` damian
2022-02-24 7:02 ` vjudeu
2 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread
From: Casey Rodarmor @ 2022-02-23 7:10 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: damian; +Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
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Well done, your bip looks well presented for discussion.
Thank you!
You say to number each satoshi created? For a 50 BTC block reward that is
> 5,000,000,000 ordinal numbers, and when some BTC is transferred to another
> UTXO how do you determine which ordinal numbers, say if I create a
> transaction to pay-to another UTXO.
>
It uses a first-in-first out algorithm, so the first ordinal number of the
first input becomes the first ordinal number of the first output.
The system sounds expensive eventually to cope with approximately
> 2,100,000,000,000,000 ordinals.
>
A full index is expensive, but it doesn't have to track 2.1 individual
entries, it only has to track contiguous ordinal ranges, which scales with
the number of outputs–all outputs, not just unspent outputs–since an output
might split an ordinal range.
If I understand ordinals 0 to 5,000,000,000 as assigned to the first
> Bitcoin created from mining block-reward. Say if I send some Bitcoin to
> another UTXO then first-in-first-out algorithm splits those up to assign 1
> to 100,000,000 to the 1 BTC that I sent, and 100,000,001 to 5,000,000,000
> are assigned to the change plus if any fee?-DA.
>
That's correct, assuming that the 1 BTC output is first, and the 4 BTC
output is second. Although it's actually 0 to 99,999,999 that go to the
first output, and 100,000,000 to 499,999,999 that are assigned to the
second output, less any fees.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers
2022-02-23 7:02 ` damian
2022-02-23 7:10 ` Casey Rodarmor
@ 2022-02-23 7:24 ` damian
2022-02-23 7:31 ` Casey Rodarmor
2022-02-24 7:02 ` vjudeu
2 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread
From: damian @ 2022-02-23 7:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Casey Rodarmor, Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
At the moment it is indisputable that a particular satoshi cannot be
proven, an amount of Bitcoin is a bag of satoshi's and no-one can tell
which ones are any particular ones **so even if you used the system of
ordinals privately, and it might make interesting for research, I cannot
see that it would be sensible to be adopted** as it can only cause
trouble. If I receive some Bitcoin I cannot know if some or any of those
have been at any point in the past been stolen, I assume the transaction
is honest, and in all likelihood it is likely that it is. The least
reasonable thing I could expect is some claimed former holder of some
ordianls turning up to challenge me that it was their stolen Bitcoin was
some of what I received.
NACK
-DA.
On 2022-02-23 18:02, damian@willtech.com.au wrote:
> Well done, your bip looks well presented for discussion. You say to
> number each satoshi created? For a 50 BTC block reward that is
> 5,000,000,000 ordinal numbers, and when some BTC is transferred to
> another UTXO how do you determine which ordinal numbers, say if I
> create a transaction to pay-to another UTXO. The system sounds
> expensive eventually to cope with approximately 2,100,000,000,000,000
> ordinals. If I understand ordinals 0 to 5,000,000,000 as assigned to
> the first Bitcoin created from mining block-reward. Say if I send some
> Bitcoin to another UTXO then first-in-first-out algorithm splits those
> up to assign 1 to 100,000,000 to the 1 BTC that I sent, and
> 100,000,001 to 5,000,000,000 are assigned to the change plus if any
> fee?-DA.
>
> On 2022-02-23 11:43, Casey Rodarmor via bitcoin-dev wrote:
>> Briefly, newly mined satoshis are sequentially numbered in the order
>> in
>> which they are mined. These numbers are called "ordinal numbers" or
>> "ordinals". When satoshis are spent in a transaction, the input
>> satoshi
>> ordinal numbers are assigned to output satoshis using a simple
>> first-in-first-out algorithm.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers
2022-02-23 7:24 ` damian
@ 2022-02-23 7:31 ` Casey Rodarmor
2022-02-24 2:34 ` damian
0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread
From: Casey Rodarmor @ 2022-02-23 7:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: damian; +Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
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The least reasonable thing I could expect is some claimed former holder of
some ordianls turning up to challenge me that it was their stolen Bitcoin
was some of what I received.
I think it's unlikely that this would come to pass. A previous owner of an
ordinal wouldn't have any particular reason to expect that they should own
it after they transfer it. Similar to how noting a dollar bill's serial
number doesn't give you a claim to it after you spend it. From the BIP:
Since any ordinal can be sent to any address at any time, ordinals that
are transferred, even those with some public history, should be considered
to be fungible with other satoshis with no such history.
<https://github.com/casey/ord/blob/master/bip.mediawiki#backward-compatibility>
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers
2022-02-23 7:31 ` Casey Rodarmor
@ 2022-02-24 2:34 ` damian
2022-02-24 15:55 ` Billy Tetrud
0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread
From: damian @ 2022-02-24 2:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Casey Rodarmor; +Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
Not all people who have been stolen from believe that they have lost the
right and title to what has been stolen and in many cases they have not.
I do not excuse Bitcoin that it is impossible to have any individual
Bitcoin identified but also I do not care, if I receive Bitcoin honestly
I do not care what their history was. What if they were taken from a
brothel? It is not a matter for an ordinal to determine if a satoshi is
fungible. It is truth in effect that each satoshi is newly created to
the new UTXO and the old satoshi destroyed. -DA.
On 2022-02-23 18:31, Casey Rodarmor wrote:
>> The least reasonable thing I could expect is some claimed former
>> holder of some ordianls turning up to challenge me that it was their
>> stolen Bitcoin was some of what I received.
>
> I think it's unlikely that this would come to pass. A previous owner
> of an ordinal wouldn't have any particular reason to expect that they
> should own it after they transfer it. Similar to how noting a dollar
> bill's serial number doesn't give you a claim to it after you spend
> it. From the BIP:
>
>> Since any ordinal can be sent to any address at any time,
>> ordinals that are transferred, even those with some public history,
>> should be considered to be fungible with other satoshis with no such
>> history. [1]
>
>
>
> Links:
> ------
> [1]
> https://github.com/casey/ord/blob/master/bip.mediawiki#backward-compatibility
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers
2022-02-24 2:34 ` damian
@ 2022-02-24 15:55 ` Billy Tetrud
2022-02-24 21:03 ` Casey Rodarmor
0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread
From: Billy Tetrud @ 2022-02-24 15:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: damian, Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
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I think the proposal is interesting in that it could be an interesting way
to solve the dust problem. While most solutions to dust focus on reducing
how much are created and encouraging consolidating utxos to avoid them
becoming dust, this proposal could utilize dust for valuable purposes. Why
use valuable Bitcoin for NFTs or colored coins when dust can be split into
it's unit satoshis and used with no loss of utility?
Simple and elegant. I like it. If we're giving ACKs: ACK. Tho TBH I don't
see any reason NACK this - seems like this doesn't affect consensus,
doesn't affect relay, doesn't affect anything except people that run this
algorithm on the blockchain. If people want to do something like this,
people are going to do it whether or not the bitcoin community wants them
to. A standard would be good rather than everyone doing their own thing.
One thought I had was: what happens if/when it comes to pass that we
increase payment precision by going sub-satoshi on chain? It seems like it
would be fairly simple to extend that to ordinals by having fraction
ordinals like 1.1 or 4.85. Could be an interesting thought to add to the
proposal.
> If a transaction is mined with the same transaction ID as outputs
currently in the UTXO set, following the behavior of Bitcoin Core, the new
transaction outputs displace the older UTXO set entries, destroying the
ordinals contained in any unspent outputs of the first transaction.
What you mean by "the same transaction id" here is unclear. I was
interpreting the proposal to mean that UTXOs are all assigned a set of
ordinals, and when that UTXO is spent, it transfers it's ordinals to
outputs in the transaction the UTXO is spent in. Is that what you mean by
this sentence? If so, I'd suggest rewording.
@Damian
> If I receive some Bitcoin I cannot know if some or any of those have been
at any point in the past been stolen, I assume the transaction is honest,
and in all likelihood it is likely that it is.
This isn't true at all. Some bitcoins are indeed known to be stolen and
even blacklisted by some companies/governments. I don't see how ordinals
changes anything related to this.
@vjudeu
> What about zero satoshis?
Those could be used for NFTs but not something like colored coins. It would
be a strict subset of ability, tho its an interesting idea in its own
right.
On Thu, Feb 24, 2022, 02:15 damian--- via bitcoin-dev <
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
> Not all people who have been stolen from believe that they have lost the
> right and title to what has been stolen and in many cases they have not.
> I do not excuse Bitcoin that it is impossible to have any individual
> Bitcoin identified but also I do not care, if I receive Bitcoin honestly
> I do not care what their history was. What if they were taken from a
> brothel? It is not a matter for an ordinal to determine if a satoshi is
> fungible. It is truth in effect that each satoshi is newly created to
> the new UTXO and the old satoshi destroyed. -DA.
>
> On 2022-02-23 18:31, Casey Rodarmor wrote:
> >> The least reasonable thing I could expect is some claimed former
> >> holder of some ordianls turning up to challenge me that it was their
> >> stolen Bitcoin was some of what I received.
> >
> > I think it's unlikely that this would come to pass. A previous owner
> > of an ordinal wouldn't have any particular reason to expect that they
> > should own it after they transfer it. Similar to how noting a dollar
> > bill's serial number doesn't give you a claim to it after you spend
> > it. From the BIP:
> >
> >> Since any ordinal can be sent to any address at any time,
> >> ordinals that are transferred, even those with some public history,
> >> should be considered to be fungible with other satoshis with no such
> >> history. [1]
> >
> >
> >
> > Links:
> > ------
> > [1]
> >
> https://github.com/casey/ord/blob/master/bip.mediawiki#backward-compatibility
> _______________________________________________
> bitcoin-dev mailing list
> bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
>
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* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers
2022-02-24 15:55 ` Billy Tetrud
@ 2022-02-24 21:03 ` Casey Rodarmor
2022-02-25 4:59 ` Billy Tetrud
0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread
From: Casey Rodarmor @ 2022-02-24 21:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Billy Tetrud; +Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
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> One thought I had was: what happens if/when it comes to pass that we
increase payment precision by going sub-satoshi on chain? It seems like it
would be fairly simple to extend that to ordinals by having fraction
ordinals like 1.1 or 4.85. Could be an interesting thought to add to the
proposal.
I think it's probably premature to make a concrete proposal, since any
proposal made now might be inapplicable to the actual form that a precision
increase takes.
> What you mean by "the same transaction id" here is unclear. I was
interpreting the proposal to mean that UTXOs are all assigned a set of
ordinals, and when that UTXO is spent, it transfers it's ordinals to
outputs in the transaction the UTXO is spent in. Is that what you mean by
this sentence? If so, I'd suggest rewording.
There are two pairs of old transactions with duplicate IDs, from blocks
91812 and 91842, and 91722 91880. (It's no longer possible to create
transactions with duplicate IDs, since the BIP 34 soft fork that required
the height be included in coinbase transaction inputs, making them have
guaranteed unique IDs.)
This section of the spec defines what ordinal ranges such duplicate
transactions contain. It tries to match the behavior of Bitcoin Core, which
considers the second transaction with a given ID to render unspendable
current UTXOs created by a transaction with the same ID.
I'll add some detail to this part of the BIP, and talk about why this rule
is needed.
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* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers
2022-02-24 21:03 ` Casey Rodarmor
@ 2022-02-25 4:59 ` Billy Tetrud
2022-02-25 11:17 ` AdamISZ
0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread
From: Billy Tetrud @ 2022-02-25 4:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Casey Rodarmor; +Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
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> what if/when we introduce some Monero-like system and hide coin amounts?
I really don't see a world where bitcoin goes that route. Hiding coin
amounts would make it impossible to audit the blockchain and verify that
there hasn't been inflation and the emission schedule is on schedule. It
would inherently remove unconditional soundness from bitcoin and replace it
with computational soundness. Even if bitcoin did adopt it, it would keep
backwards compatibility with old style addresses which could continue to
use ordinals.
On Thu, Feb 24, 2022 at 3:03 PM Casey Rodarmor <casey@rodarmor.com> wrote:
> > One thought I had was: what happens if/when it comes to pass that we
> increase payment precision by going sub-satoshi on chain? It seems like it
> would be fairly simple to extend that to ordinals by having fraction
> ordinals like 1.1 or 4.85. Could be an interesting thought to add to the
> proposal.
>
> I think it's probably premature to make a concrete proposal, since any
> proposal made now might be inapplicable to the actual form that a precision
> increase takes.
>
> > What you mean by "the same transaction id" here is unclear. I was
> interpreting the proposal to mean that UTXOs are all assigned a set of
> ordinals, and when that UTXO is spent, it transfers it's ordinals to
> outputs in the transaction the UTXO is spent in. Is that what you mean by
> this sentence? If so, I'd suggest rewording.
>
> There are two pairs of old transactions with duplicate IDs, from blocks
> 91812 and 91842, and 91722 91880. (It's no longer possible to create
> transactions with duplicate IDs, since the BIP 34 soft fork that required
> the height be included in coinbase transaction inputs, making them have
> guaranteed unique IDs.)
>
> This section of the spec defines what ordinal ranges such duplicate
> transactions contain. It tries to match the behavior of Bitcoin Core, which
> considers the second transaction with a given ID to render unspendable
> current UTXOs created by a transaction with the same ID.
>
> I'll add some detail to this part of the BIP, and talk about why this rule
> is needed.
>
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* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers
2022-02-25 4:59 ` Billy Tetrud
@ 2022-02-25 11:17 ` AdamISZ
2022-02-25 15:56 ` Billy Tetrud
0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread
From: AdamISZ @ 2022-02-25 11:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Billy Tetrud, Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
> I really don't see a world where bitcoin goes that route. Hiding coin amounts would make it impossible to audit the blockchain and verify that there hasn't been inflation and the emission schedule is on schedule. It would inherently remove unconditional soundness from bitcoin and replace it with computational soundness. Even if bitcoin did adopt it, it would keep backwards compatibility with old style addresses which could continue to use ordinals.
Nit: it isn't technically correct to say that amount hiding "inherently removes unconditional soundness". Such commitments can be either perfectly hiding or perfectly binding; it isn't even logically possible for them to be both, sadly. But we are not forced to choose perfect binding; El Gamal commitments, for example, are perfectly binding but only computationally hiding.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers
2022-02-25 11:17 ` AdamISZ
@ 2022-02-25 15:56 ` Billy Tetrud
0 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread
From: Billy Tetrud @ 2022-02-25 15:56 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: AdamISZ; +Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
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> El Gamal commitments, for example, are perfectly binding but only
computationally hiding.
That's very interesting. I stand corrected in that respect. Thanks for the
information Adam!
On Fri, Feb 25, 2022, 05:17 AdamISZ <AdamISZ@protonmail.com> wrote:
> > I really don't see a world where bitcoin goes that route. Hiding coin
> amounts would make it impossible to audit the blockchain and verify that
> there hasn't been inflation and the emission schedule is on schedule. It
> would inherently remove unconditional soundness from bitcoin and replace it
> with computational soundness. Even if bitcoin did adopt it, it would keep
> backwards compatibility with old style addresses which could continue to
> use ordinals.
>
> Nit: it isn't technically correct to say that amount hiding "inherently
> removes unconditional soundness". Such commitments can be either perfectly
> hiding or perfectly binding; it isn't even logically possible for them to
> be both, sadly. But we are not forced to choose perfect binding; El Gamal
> commitments, for example, are perfectly binding but only computationally
> hiding.
>
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* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers
2022-02-23 7:02 ` damian
2022-02-23 7:10 ` Casey Rodarmor
2022-02-23 7:24 ` damian
@ 2022-02-24 7:02 ` vjudeu
2022-02-24 7:17 ` Casey Rodarmor
2 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread
From: vjudeu @ 2022-02-24 7:02 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: damian, Casey Rodarmor, Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
> The system sounds expensive eventually to cope with approximately 2,100,000,000,000,000 ordinals.
What about zero satoshis? There are transactions, where zero satoshis are created or moved. Typical users cannot do that, but miners can, we currently have such transactions in the blockchain, for example 9f0b871e28fa19e2308e2fa74243bf2dcf23b160754df847d5f1e41aabe499d1 (check the last two inputs).
On 2022-02-24 01:53:36 user damian--- via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
> Well done, your bip looks well presented for discussion. You say to
number each satoshi created? For a 50 BTC block reward that is
5,000,000,000 ordinal numbers, and when some BTC is transferred to
another UTXO how do you determine which ordinal numbers, say if I create
a transaction to pay-to another UTXO. The system sounds expensive
eventually to cope with approximately 2,100,000,000,000,000 ordinals. If
I understand ordinals 0 to 5,000,000,000 as assigned to the first
Bitcoin created from mining block-reward. Say if I send some Bitcoin to
another UTXO then first-in-first-out algorithm splits those up to assign
1 to 100,000,000 to the 1 BTC that I sent, and 100,000,001 to
5,000,000,000 are assigned to the change plus if any fee?-DA.
On 2022-02-23 11:43, Casey Rodarmor via bitcoin-dev wrote:
> Briefly, newly mined satoshis are sequentially numbered in the order
> in
> which they are mined. These numbers are called "ordinal numbers" or
> "ordinals". When satoshis are spent in a transaction, the input
> satoshi
> ordinal numbers are assigned to output satoshis using a simple
> first-in-first-out algorithm.
_______________________________________________
bitcoin-dev mailing list
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers
@ 2022-02-24 17:52 vjudeu
2022-02-24 21:02 ` Casey Rodarmor
0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread
From: vjudeu @ 2022-02-24 17:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Billy Tetrud, bitcoin-dev
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> what happens if/when it comes to pass that we increase payment precision by going sub-satoshi on chain?
When we talk about future improvements, there could be even bigger problem with ordinal numbers: what if/when we introduce some Monero-like system and hide coin amounts? (for example by using zero satoshi, because we have to use something that will be backward-compatible). Zero is quite interesting amount, because it means "skip amount checking for old clients". That can be used in many ways to introduce many protocols (and also to add fractional satoshis on-chain, because 0.4 satoshis could be represented as zero), so if that amounts will be simply ignored, then I wonder how it would be possible to connect some future protocol based on that with ordinal numbers.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Draft-BIP: Ordinal Numbers
2022-02-24 17:52 vjudeu
@ 2022-02-24 21:02 ` Casey Rodarmor
0 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread
From: Casey Rodarmor @ 2022-02-24 21:02 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: vjudeu, Bitcoin Protocol Discussion; +Cc: Billy Tetrud
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> When we talk about future improvements, there could be even bigger
problem with ordinal numbers: what if/when we introduce some Monero-like
system and hide coin amounts? (for example by using zero satoshi, because
we have to use something that will be backward-compatible). Zero is quite
interesting amount, because it means "skip amount checking for old
clients". That can be used in many ways to introduce many protocols (and
also to add fractional satoshis on-chain, because 0.4 satoshis could be
represented as zero), so if that amounts will be simply ignored, then I
wonder how it would be possible to connect some future protocol based on
that with ordinal numbers.
Ordinal numbers are inherently public, so it seems reasonable that they
don't work with transactions that are private or have obfuscated values.
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2022-02-23 7:02 ` damian
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2022-02-23 7:24 ` damian
2022-02-23 7:31 ` Casey Rodarmor
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