Some netizens asked: "If the inscription wants to continue, a more environmentally friendly way is to create an 'inscription chain', similar to Ethereum's Layer 2. This chain only needs to submit hashroot to Bitcoin regularly to run, right?" ?”
Bitcoin Core developer Luke Dashjr responded: “Yes, that would work. Then it wouldn’t even need to have a block size limit at all, each node could set its own limit (or no limit).”
According to previous news, Bitcoin Core developer Luke Dashjr posted on the Sets an additional data size limit when relaying or mining transactions. Inscription circumvents this limit by obscuring its data into program code. This vulnerability was recently fixed in Bitcoin Knots V25.1. Since late last year my Workflows are severely disrupted (V24 was skipped entirely) and fixes are taking longer than usual. There is still a vulnerability in Bitcoin Core in the upcoming V26 release. I can only hope that it will be finally fixed before V27 next year.”
In response to netizens’ comments, Luke Dashjr said that after the vulnerability is fixed, it means that Ordinals and BRC-20 will no longer exist.