• The Informer Post
  • Posts
  • XRP Was Created Before Use Case For Crypto Asset Was Discovered, Says Ripple Chief Technology Officer

XRP Was Created Before Use Case For Crypto Asset Was Discovered, Says Ripple Chief Technology Officer

Ripple’s chief technology officer David Schwartz is offering new insight on how XRP came into existence.

On the Modern CTO Podcast, Schwartz says XRP was created before its developers had any idea what its primary use case would be.

“Well, the key difference and the very first animating idea for what eventually became what we now call the XRP ledger was the Proof of Work. The mining in Bitcoin wasn’t the secret sauce…

We had an alternate theory and our theory was that what made Bitcoin so amazing was not the Proof of Work, not mining. What made Bitcoin so amazing was the fact that all the data was public, and all the transaction rules were public. So, you don’t have to ask anybody else if a transaction is valid or if somebody has a particular amount of Bitcoins or anything. Everybody can do that for themselves. We felt that that was the key innovation to Bitcoin… So, we replaced the Proof of Work with what you would call a Distributed Agreement Algorithm which is an algorithm that is faster and doesn’t have the sort of power consumption.”

After XRP was built, Schwartz says the next step became to figure out how it could be used.

“Once you say ‘ok, we’ve built this new system that works,’ the next question to ask logically is ‘what is it good for? What are its advantages?’ Sometimes it might have no advantages. If you invented a new material but it’s really heavy, really expensive, makes water damages, it’s not very sturdy – oh well I’ve developed this new material, but I can’t find a use case… It’s kind of the reverse. Usually, you start with the use case, but when you’re building something totally new, you have no idea what people are going to use it for. All you can do is build it and see what it’s good for.”

Schwartz says Ripple ultimately decided XRP would be used for international payments given its speed, low transaction cost and the significant amount of issues plaguing the current banking system.

“The use case that we settled on was payments, particularly international payments simply because that’s where there’s pain. So, you want to find a problem that people agree is a problem and ideally, the worse the problem, the less perfect you have to be to be better than whatever they’ve got. International payments were so bad. Particular things like remittances were just so bad that we could still be pretty bad and still be better…

When you are just starting out, people are going to have to take a risk. What if the whole system just breaks one day or what if regulations destroy it. You want to pick a problem that is really painful for people and payments are really painful. If you compare sending a payment to sending an email, you know you could make a long list of all the differences. So that was sort of the direction that we launched on.”

Disclaimer: Opinions expressed at The Daily Hodl are not investment advice. Investors should do their due diligence before making any high-risk investments in Bitcoin, cryptocurrency or digital assets. Please be advised that your transfers and trades are at your own risk, and any losses you may incur are your responsibility. The Daily Hodl does not recommend the buying or selling of any cryptocurrencies or digital assets, nor is The Daily Hodl an investment advisor. Please note that The Daily Hodl participates in affiliate marketing.

Featured Image: Shutterstock/Es sarawuth