Samson Mow, CEO of Bitcoin wallet company Jan3, accused veteran Bitcoin developer Peter Todd of being paid to write the controversial Bitcoin Core code change proposal PR 32359, which aims to remove the data carrier restriction of OP_RETURN in the default memory pool. Mow claimed this was a corporate initiative rather than a community-driven idea. Antoine Poinsot and Todd from Chaincode Labs argued for removing the restrictions on cultural and technical grounds, stating the restrictions were ineffective in preventing non-financial on-chain data storage, but Todd admitted the proposal mainly benefits companies. Mow suspected "PR money laundering" payments, which Poinsot denied, accusing Mow of seeking attention. Blockstream engineer Greg Sanders noted that Core plans to implement PR 32359 in the next update, but intentions are uncertain as votes and participation on GitHub have been locked amid differing developer opinions. Opposition from full nodes has reached a new high, and the topic #FixTheFilters is trending on social media, with critics accusing Core of favoring enterprises over Bitcoin development.