Saylor’s Bold Bet: Bitcoin ’Ossification’ Strategy Views All Changes as Existential Threats
MicroStrategy's Michael Saylor doubles down on Bitcoin's immutability doctrine—arguing any protocol changes threaten its core value proposition.
The Hard Line
Saylor's ossification thesis gains traction among institutional holders who treat Bitcoin like digital gold rather than tech experiment. No upgrades, no compromises—just pure monetary hardness.
Why Institutions Agree
Hedge funds and corporate treasuries now prefer predictable scarcity over experimental features. They’ll take 'boring' store-of-value over flashy smart contracts every time—much to the chagrin of crypto maximalists pushing for innovation.
The Bottom Line
While other chains chase decentralized finance trends, Bitcoin’s resistance to change becomes its ultimate selling point. Sometimes the best innovation is refusing to innovate at all—especially when Wall Street’s betting billions on stagnation. Funny how 'digital gold' suddenly means never having to say you’re sorry for outdated tech.
