Bitcoin Improvement Proposal 110 (BIP-110), a temporary soft fork aimed at limiting data within transactions, has garnered support from 2.38% of Bitcoin nodes. Out of 24,481 detectable nodes, 583 are running the BIP-110 implementation, primarily using Bitcoin Knots software. The proposal enforces a 34-byte limit on transaction outputs and an 83-byte cap on OP_RETURN data for one year, with potential for extension. The initiative reflects ongoing debates over data storage, network costs, and decentralization within the Bitcoin ecosystem. Critics argue that relaxing data limits could increase storage costs and centralization, while supporters believe current restrictions fail to deter spam effectively. The temporary nature of BIP-110 suggests a reevaluation of data constraints after its one-year term, highlighting the tension between maintaining a decentralized network and managing resource demands.