PANews reported on April 29 that according to Protos, Bitcoin core developers are engaged in a heated debate on the removal of OP_Return data storage restrictions. Peter Todd's PR 32359 proposal proposes to abolish the current 83-byte data carrier output limit, which has received theoretical support from Chaincode Labs developer Antoine Poinsot. Developers pointed out that the existing restrictions have been proven to be ineffective - users continue to store non-financial data through various methods such as Taproot unspendable outputs and miners' private memory pools (such as MARA Slipstream). Supporters believe that the current restrictions are ineffective and hinder legitimate use cases; Luke Dashjr, a representative of the opposition, denounced the proposal as "completely crazy" and emphasized that vulnerabilities should be fixed rather than condoning "junk data attacks." Developers are posting new comments every hour through mailing list threads and GitHub. Some people expressed support with a simple "concept ACK", but no comprehensive technical testing has been carried out, while others issued a "concept NACK" to express opposition.