Why ripple is not a cryptocurrency!

in bitcoin •  7 years ago  (edited)

I'm putting this post together for some friends that are really crypto noobs and are now heavily investing in ripple. I don't think that ripple is bad or anything I just want everybody to be careful if they trust a company which holds 61 % of all tokens.

The distribution

The amount of XRP in existance is limited to 100 billion. They are premined e. g. created from the company called ripple. No more XRP can be generated. The company holds about 61 % of all XRP created. This corresponds to about 61 billion XRP. However ripple is not free to sell it when they want. The coins are locked up in smart contract that only allows the release of about 1 billion XRP per month. Of course ripple has no interest in releasing all coins at once and crashing the market but what if they need the money to cover the development cost? Or if they no longer believe in XRP and just want the quick cash? Today XRP is worth about $2,82. Even if they sold XRP for less than a fifth of the market price ($0.5) they would make $ 30 billions in cash! None of them would ever have to work again. Despite the fact that the ripple ecosystem would collapse.

Transactions per second

Ripple states that they handle 1500 transactions per second and that they can easily scale to 50'000 transactions per second. Bitshares on the other hand claims to be able to handle about 100'000 transactions per second and even doubles the performance of Visa. The question that remains for me is, why ripple sticks with 1500 tps if they could handle 50'000?

Fees

If a ripple transaction is made a small amount of XRP is burnt (e. g. destroyed). This is to prevent the network from malicious denial-of-service attacks. The transaction cost increases with the load on the network. The standard transaction fee is about 0.00001 XRP this is equal to $0.000028. Iota on the other hand has zero transaction fees which makes it suitable for very small transactions.

Conclusion

XRP is largely different from Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. For most of the older "bitcoiners" XRP is not a real cryptocurrency. As it may have a functional business model, investors should know that they trust a third party entity (e. g. ripple) with their money. Make sure to learn more about ripple before investing in the "next bitcoin".
Also have a look at the tweet from Charlie Lee the founder of litecoin: twitter.

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Charlie Lee (founder of Litecoin) was saying that on Twitter couple of months ago. I liked his argument that Ripple controls 100 billion of their own tokens and thus is more like a centralized token.

https://twitter.com/satoshilite/status/906391812993990661?lang=en

Thanks for the link man! Interesting.

XRP or Ripple and RippleNet is the replacement for the SwiftNet ..

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Society_for_Worldwide_Interbank_Financial_Telecommunication

With a bit of research you can see the connections ..

boinc
Courtesy of @joshoeah

Thanks. Should have made this point in the article.

XRP is a tentative try from Banks to control the Cryptosphere, personally I'm just especulating with this coin, non hodling. I found more interesting other options as Stellar which is similar to XRP

Ripple isnt designed for you to be able to buy a coffee with, so I dont see much of a retail market developing if that is not their focus, so for me its only 'value' is pure speculation, which for me is pointless, I hold coins I hope to spend one day.

fully agree, that's my point as well

Great article, people need to know what they are buying and not just look at making money.

Jain

Exactly. More and more people are joining crypto. On one hand this is good on the other hand more and more noobs will loose their money as they only see quick cash and don't investigate where they put their money in.

I didn't know what. Thanks for the info @grider123 :)

Your welcome!

Thanks for the info. I've invested a small amount so good to know exactly what I'm getting into.

You're welcome :)