Timeline of XRP Evolution
Fascinated by Bitcoin, they set out to create a better version that improved upon its limitations with the goal of creating a digital asset that was more sustainable and built specifically for payments.
The XRP Ledger first launched in June 2012. Shortly
thereafter, they were joined by Chris Larsen and the group started the Company Open
Coin in September 2012 (now named Ripple). The founders of the XRP Ledger
gifted 80 billion XRP to the company. Ripple has since sold some of its XRP and
put the rest in escrow.
The history of the XRP Ledger and its native digital asset
XRP dates back to early 2011 when three developers David Schwartz, Jed McCaleb
and Arthur Britto were fascinated with Bitcoin but observed the waste
inherent in mining. They sought to create a better system for sending value (an
idea outlined in a May 2011 forum post: “Bitcoin without mining”). More Visit: What is Ripple cryptocurrency XRP
Their initial observations about the high energy consumption
and scalability issues that would plague Bitcoin proved prescient. (In 2019,
estimates suggest Bitcoin mining used more energy than the entire
country of Portugal!) Moreover, their initial read indicated that significant
problems could arise if any miner obtained (or miners colluded to obtain) greater
than 50% of the mining power that risk persists with Bitcoin (and Ethereum)
today as mining power has consolidated in China.
In 2011 and early 2012, the trio of developers started a
project to build a distributed ledger that improved upon these fundamental
limitations of Bitcoin their first ever code commit was in November 2011. They
wrote code, that when executed, would create a distributed ledger, which they
named Ripple. It included a digital asset that would be called “ripples” (XRP
as the currency code) to follow the same naming convention as Bitcoin (BTC).
At the time, Ripple stood for the open-source project, the
unique consensus ledger (Ripple Consensus Ledger), transaction protocol (Ripple
Transaction Protocol or RTXP), the network (Ripple network) and the digital
asset (known as “ripples”). In practice, this approach led to many, broad uses
of “Ripple.” To clarify, the community simply started calling the digital
asset, “XRP.”
By June 2012, Schwartz, McCaleb and Britto completed code
development and the XRP Ledger was fully functioning. At that time, they
decided their next move would be to gift 80 billion XRP to a not-yet-formed
private company that would work with the broader community as well as pursue
its own payments mission. The ledger code itself would be open source and for
anyone to use.
They all agreed on how to allocate the XRP among themselves
and the future company, and they eventually created the company along with
Chris Larsen in September 2012. Once the XRP Ledger was fully functioning, 80%
of the XRP was gifted to the company—initially called NewCoin and renamed
quickly to OpenCoin. Chris Larsen was the CEO of OpenCoin, and at the company's
founding, Jed was co-founder and CTO, David Schwartz was the Chief Cryptography
Officer, and Arthur Britto an advisor.
At the outset of the company, OpenCoin set out to
revolutionize the global financial system. Despite the revolutionary ideals of
many of Bitcoin’s early believers, Larsen never thought blockchain technology
should be used to overthrow the existing financial system. He believed that
history’s most transformative innovations have always relied on the great ideas
that came before them—not disrupting them.
In early conversations with potential customers, the team
was asked about the differences between the Ripple project and OpenCoin Company.
With the community starting to call the digital asset by its currency code
"XRP" more widely, company leaders decided to rebrand the company to
Ripple Labs, which has been shortened over time to "Ripple." Today,
the company uses XRP and the XRP Ledger for liquidity management in its
cross-border payments business. Ripple also remains a stakeholder and
contributor to the broader XRP community.
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