What is a âcryptocurrency?â
Try as Webster dictionary may, a formal definition remains hard to pin down. While itâs unclear exactly when the word itself was coined, bitcoin, the worldâs very first such cryptographically-backed asset, is probably the answer that most often springs to mind.
Still, a vast array of very different technologies now carry and use the moniker, and companies, opportunists and investors all seem to have their own version of the word and its meaning.
Naturally, some crypto assets have also run afoul of this ever-changing status quo.
Perhaps the largest yet to draw this complaint is XRP, the third-largest cryptocurrency by value and the technology that powers just one of several enterprise banking products offered by San Francisco startup Ripple.
Earlier this year, XRP broke out of its sideways trading, moving from around $0.30 to nearly $4. While the price soon after receded, interest in Ripple is larger than ever, with a whole new captured audience cheering on its announcements and partnerships.
But as many others are keen to point out, bitcoin and XRP arenât exactly the same. In fact, calling both âcryptocurrencies,â to some, would be like calling fruits vegetables.
âJust a friendly reminder. Ripple is not a cryptocurrency,â BitcoinTalk user âleopard2â wrote recently.
Itâs a statement echoed by many others throughout the industry.
âI donât call this cryptocurrency. Itâs not currency,â Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse said at a Yahoo Finance conference in February.
Instead, the company seems to prefer the term âdigital asset.â And that isnât necessarily just smoke and mirrors. Indeed, terms such as token, asset, unit and currency are used indiscriminately throughout the industry.
So, while XRP may not fit the definition of cryptocurrency, examining the technology from the lens of this nomenclature and its debates can be helpful in understanding its key features.
One of the main criticisms of XRP is that itâs not truly âdecentralized.â
If youâre new to the space, that might not mean much. But, decentralization is a big deal to crypto enthusiasts. In many ways, itâs an attribute that separates cryptocurrencies from older online money systems, where a central authority could block or have control over transactions.
Supporters of âdecentralized cryptocurrenciesâ tout the internet as an example of a decentralized system, in that information moves freely and openly (with some restrictions) and without any central party in the middle operating it.
Still, others see centralization as a tradeoff, arguing itâs oftentimes too inefficient. Ripple developers readily admit that XRP does things differently and isnât as decentralized as they would like it to be.
The debate, then, is not over how centralized Ripple is, but whether it produces a better online money without the same, full decentralization of bitcoin.
The argument against XRP:Â Some argue that XRP doesnât add anything new in the way of innovations in crypto-economics, another buzzword in the nascent field.
One often touted sticking point is that Ripple the company selects which nodes validate transactions, compiling whatâs known as the Unique Node List (UNL). In bitcoin, ethereum and other cryptocurrencies, anyone running the software can perform this action.
Indeed, a major cryptocurrency exchange went so far as to call out this point in a research report on Ripple released last month, which argues XRP âdoes not serve a clear purpose.â
Although Ripple has brought on a range of entities to validate transactions on the network, including the likes of Microsoft and MIT who are now running XRP nodes, critics argue that the way the algorithm is set up, other nodes veer toward trusting Rippleâs node, and therefore, the company itself.
The argument for Ripple:Â Ripple developers argue the opposite, that XRP is better than more traditional cryptocurrencies for several reasons: Itâs faster and more scalable. Plus, itâs less expensive to secure than bitcoinâs energy-hungry proof-of-work.
Ripple chief market executive Cory Johnson went as far as to argue XRP âdemonstrates an intrinsic valueâ that stands out among âsillierâ coins and assets.
Not to mention, time and time again, Ripple developers have argued that they plan to decentralize XRP over time, a goal theyâve chronicled in their company blog. And thereâs merit to suggest it is. Already, startups are looking to do things with XRP, like launch ICOs, that the company doesnât quite condone.
In an earlier interview with CoinDesk, Ripple CTO Stefan Thomas went as far as to contend XRP will be âmore decentralizedâ than bitcoin in the future as they add more validators and flesh out the technology. He and other Ripple developers further argue theyâve delivered on their past promises.
Back when XRP wasnât open source, critics argued it would never be. But Ripple open sourced the code for its XRP âfull node,â meaning it could get more scrutiny from outside developers and users could for the first time use to operate to join the network in 2013, seen as at the time as a step away from sole control of the online token from Ripple the company.
Because of its track record of delivering on its goal of decentralizing XRP, including adding 55 more validators to the network last year, Ripple developers believe thereâs at least some reason to believe it will fulfill its vision, however ambitious.
Nomenclature aside, thereâs still Rippleâs relationship to the XRP Ledger to parse.
Indeed, a recent Bloomberg report noted that because XRP isnât clearly defined, it could end up being considered a security by the SEC. The assertion seems to stem from attempts by Ripple to have XRP listed on major exchanges, attempts the news source alleges may have failed over this concern.
âWhile the coin doesnât represent an ownership stake in Ripple, the concern is the close relationship might still lead regulators to deem XRP a security,â the report reads.
In response, the issue has seen no shortage of airtime on social media.
The argument against Ripple:Â Critics here argue that thereâs a case that XRP could be considered a security because of the way that it was released in many ways a variation on the initial coin offering (ICO) model.
Indeed, after XRP Ledger (then called the Ripple Consensus Ledger) was created, XRP tokens were distributed to users of popular bitcoin forums in what isnât all that different from whatâs today called an âairdrop.â
But while speculative, the comments hint at another issue, the seeming preference among Ripple executives for talking up XRP when the price is going up.
Critics argue that when the token sees boosted attention, like over the last several months, Rippleâs leaders parade it around. In a recent Fox News interview, for example, CEO Brad Garlinghouse trumpeted XRP specifically as the beginning of a ânew asset classâ solving a âglobal payments problem.â
Meanwhile, when itâs trading sideways, the public-facing company doesnât pay it much attention, critics argue, adding that if Ripple really believes XRP is a crucial piece of its product, the startup should herald it consistently (and within the boundaries of securities laws).
The argument for Ripple:Â Still, others see the security question as moot.
For one, Rippleâs business doesnât directly influence the value of its cryptocurrency, though it would doubtless benefit from the kind of demand generated by large banking institutions using it to move transactions.
In this way, supporters argue thereâs always been a clear purpose for XRP: it makes any financial products built on the platform even faster and cheaper.
Plus, itâs not exactly fair to say that the entire company has flip-flopped on their view of XRP.
Many of Rippleâs chief developers and researchers have held on strong to the idea of XRP as a token, even if the public-facing company appears less steadfast.
Ripple has always touted itself as a partner for banks and other large financial services providers, but many critics think the company doesnât give those providers any real compelling reason to use XRP.
That said, a spate of companies have begun using all three of Rippleâs products â xCurrent, xRapid and xVia â this year. Even a number of financial institutions and payments providers have started piloting the use of xRapid, Rippleâs only product that hinges on XRP use.
The argument against Ripple: Critics argue that XRP will never get much adoption from big entities. (Even some Ripple clients have said they think XRP is too volatile and risky a currency to adopt right now.)
Pseudonymous cryptocurrency investor and essayist P4man argues that the two ideas Ripple tries to mix together only make sense independently. RipplePay, an idea predating cryptocurrency that allows local communities to have more control over their currencies, makes sense as an innovative way to send money through a network of people that users trust. And bitcoin makes sense as a new type of digital currency without control.
But mashing them together, as Ripple does, just doesnât work, he contends. Rather it results in an overcomplex system that doesnât result in what itâs supposed to: cheaper, faster payments.
And P4man goes on to make an even bolder claim: The only ârational reasonâ for XRP to exist is for Ripple to make money off of it amid the cryptocurrency craze, a claim he and other critics believe is backed up by the fact the company and associated foundations own at least 60 billion of the 100 billion total XRP coins.
The argument for Ripple: Ripple and its supporters, though, do think thereâs a reason â they often describe Rippleâs ledger products as a trojan horse. Once they successfully carry the Ripple horse to enough banks around the world, they will unleash XRP on the unsuspecting financial system.
This is already happening as Ripple begins to encourage companies using xCurrent to move to xRapid for added liquidity.
Ripple chief cryptographer David Schwartz expanded on this view in an XRP chat post, arguing that as the startup expands the number of âcorridorsâ it operates in, XRPâs usefulness increases.
âNow, say youâre a company like Seagate that pays out money all over the globe. If you have to make payments to five countries in our corridors, youâd rather hold one pile of XRP than five piles of different currencies,â he said in a post on the forum, XRP chat.
While admitting itâs âa pretty crazy thingâ Ripple is trying to do, Schwartz continued:
âIf that succeeds, it should massively increase the price of XRP.â
Ripple image via Shutterstock