The startup that oversees development of the worldâs third most-valuable cryptocurrency, XRP, is moving to upgrade the underlying technology on which it operates.
Announced Wednesday, San Francisco-based startup Ripple is releasing two new white papers for peer review â one describing XRPâs consensus algorithm in a more formal way and the other outlining a way to improve the diversity of connections of each node, the software users run to relay and verify transactions on the network.
Taken together, the moves show that Ripple, whose investors include banks like Santander and SBI, is ready and willing to invest in the core infrastructure supporting its cryptocurrency, which despite falling out of favor with the company at times, now secures more than $40 billion in value.
Yet, while XRP has become one of the most in-demand crypto assets, in some ways its development has lagged behind other more established offerings like bitcoin and ether.
Indeed, Ripple CTO Stefan Thomas sought to portray the papers as a step towards developing a tighter relationship between the companyâs research arm and academia. In short, the startup wants it to be easier for researchers to follow Rippleâs technology, so its easier for them to contribute.
In interview, Thomas sought to stress how the papers open up the possibility of further building a network effect around the tech â one that might be key now that traders are buying in.
Thomas told CoinDesk:
âThis is the first time weâre releasing peer-reviewed academic papers. Obviously, it opens the door for future research. After this, I expect youâll hear much more about us interacting with academia.â
More broadly, the papers can be seen as perhaps the first attempt in some time for the company to refresh and improve documentation around the open-source platform. (The work is the first since 2014 to detail the XRP Ledger, then called the Ripple Consensus Ledger.)
As such, the papers are also a statement on the continuing evolution of Ripple, which after launching with the goal of repurposing cryptocurrency into a secure payments network is seeking to replace centralized bank messaging and liquidity services with decentralized alternatives.
For Thomas, however, the two releases have one central theme: security.
âWhat weâre trying to do here is add some defenses against some unlikely attack scenarios. Basically, it says you canât completely manipulate the entire network,â he explained.
The key word here is âunlikely.â Thomas argues these attack vectors arenât viable unless the attacker was a state actor, say the U.S. government, with enough money and technological resources to disrupt the network. And though he isnât particularly worried about this happening, Thomas said the startup is trying to protect against those use cases anyway.
âWeâre extremely cautious. We want the best security,â he added.
The first paper, called âAnalysis of the XRP Ledger Consensus Protocolâ builds on the companyâs 2014 paper, providing a formal, mathematical proof that whatâs supposed to happen on the network will really happen. It boils down to two things: âsafety,â that the network wonât fork into two competing networks, and âliveness,â that the network wonât get stuck and will keep processing transactions.
The second paper, âCobalt: BFT Governance in Open Networksâ seeks to improve on previous XRP plans with an algorithm that supports a richer array of validators.
You can think of XRP as kind of like a voting system, where each node storing Rippleâs transaction history gets a vote on what happens next. To help it accomplish this, each node in Ripple carries something called a Unique Node List (UNL), a list of nodes on the Ripple network that the node considers legitimate.
So, if each node is connecting to a better variety of nodes, the argument goes, thatâs good for the long-term resiliency and decentralization of the network.
Both papers draw heavily on distributed systems, a body of computer science research describing how large connected networks function. And because theyâre more theoretical, Thomas stressed these papers will likely have a longer-term impact.
âItâs not going to affect how users use XRP right now. They wonât experience any downtime or anything,â he said.
Still, it will remain to be seen if Rippleâs developments, including these papers, are enough to allay criticisms of Ripple and its arguably hot-and-cold relationship with XRP. Itâs worth noting there are some who have been skeptical of its tech from the beginning, and that these criticisms have only grown as XRP has seen more attention.
Critics are often supporters of other blockchains, like bitcoin or ethereum, which seek to use decentralization in a different way. (Some even going as far as to argue the technology âserves no purposeâ as an alternative to todayâs global, financial technology.)
Thomas, though, is unfazed by these negative assessments.
In statements, he sought to position critics as out of touch, while remarking that the nature of the technology is that it can improve and respond to market needs.
âCritics are always one step behind,â Thomas told CoinDesk. âWhen I started at Ripple, all sorts of things didnât happen. It wasnât open-source, we didnât have validators, but over time itâs grown and weâve been able to accomplish all of these things.â
In this way, Thomas sees the papers as just another way Ripple is responding to market needs, whether thatâs ensuring itâs providing an alternative to SWIFT or that its cryptocurrency is secure.
As Thomas views it, curbing centralization of validation is what theyâre working on next, even going as far as to argue that Ripple will be âfar more decentralizedâ than bitcoin in the future.
Disclosure: CoinDesk is a subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which has an ownership stake in Ripple.Â
Ripple coin image via Shutterstock