Ripple (XRP): What Is It, History and How to Buy
Image shows the hand of a person who is out of the frame checking their digital currency online. SmartAsset takes a closer look at Ripple (XRP).
Image shows the hand of a person who is out of the frame checking their digital currency online. SmartAsset takes a closer look at Ripple (XRP).

Ripple (XRP) is a real-time gross settlement (RTGS) system, which is a specialist money transfer network, currency exchange and remittance network. It was created by Ripple Labs Inc., which is a U.S.-based technology company. It was released in 2012. Ripple is validated by independent servers, and the currency that is traded is known as XRP, a cryptocurrency. XRP can be exchanged for most other currencies, and helps users avoid wait times associated with banks.

In general the price of cryptocurrency is relatively volatile, meaning that it can fluctuate. To understand whether something like this belongs in your portfolio consider consulting a professional financial advisor today.

What is Ripple (XRP)?

Unlike other forms of cryptocurrency such as Bitcoin and Ethereum, Ripple is not made up of a blockchain, but rather what’s called a “hash tree.” XRP cannot be mined, because there is a limited number of coins – 100 billion.

Blockchain technology is the basis of cryptocurrency. It is a type of database that collects information together in groups, or blocks. Each new piece of information that follows a newly added block is put together into a newly formed block that is then added to the chain. As the name implies, block chain structures data into blocks that are chained together.

Ripple works like blockchain, because multiple nodes are used to process a transaction. The payment process involves someone sending a transaction, the information being given a single value and being sent out to a shared public database, validating servers or nodes sharing the information and – if separate servers report a match – the transaction being authorized and processed.

Image shows abstract representation of digital currency. SmartAsset takes a look at Ripple (XRP).
Image shows abstract representation of digital currency. SmartAsset takes a look at Ripple (XRP).

The reason that the system is not similar to Bitcoin is that it does not involve proof of work (through which a miner on the Bitcoin blockchain completes a complex equation to show the work before the block is accepted into the chain). By contrast, the Ripple model is consensus-based. Once consensus is reached, the transaction is cleared. Because of this, the Ripple network can process 1,500 transactions per second, whereas Bitcoin can handle between three and six of these transactions and Ethereum can handle 15 of them in the same time frame. Despite not being identical to the blockchain system, the Ripple process is relatively efficient and speedy, making it a big reason banks and major payment processes are considering and exploring what it looks like to use Ripple.

Additionally, Ripple isn’t exactly decentralized in the way that Ethereum, for example, is. The developers have some control over a mechanism that protects the system from malicious operators, bu that also means that Ripple can technically control which servers are accepted on to the network (making it a central authority). This is why some would even say that XRP is not a true or standard cryptocurrency.