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Early Ripple investor: “99 percent” of people in crypto just seek financial gains Early Ripple investor: “99 percent” of people in crypto just seek financial gains
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Early Ripple investor: “99 percent” of people in crypto just seek financial gains

Early Ripple investor: “99 percent” of people in crypto just seek financial gains

Photo by Steve Jennings, Getty Images

The cryptocurrency market is like none other. Most โ€œtraditionalโ€ investors shy away from the volatile market, even as returns eclipse any other asset class, and blockchain technology continues to develop.

But one early-blockchain investor believes the industry still holds promise, even as most run behind purely incentive-based objectives.

Ripple was exciting

Kevin Rose, an American internet entrepreneur and investor, is perhaps best known as the co-founder of news curating platform Digg, his subsequent work with Google Ventures (GV), and now as a partner at True Ventures.

But thereโ€™s a small bit that not many in the crypto industry know. At GV in 2013, Rose led venture investment in a then-obscure blockchain firm, Ripple Labs, which went on to become one of the worldโ€™s most popular providers of blockchain-based enterprise solutions.

Speaking to TechCrunch as part of a larger interview, Rose was asked about his current position on Ripple, which has since become a โ€œcontroversial” company.

The 43-year-old noted:

There was a very different world when Ripple was first getting off the ground (โ€ฆ) there was no way for the enterprise to embrace it (cryptocurrency) in any fashion.

Rose added Rippleโ€™s business plan, that of creating an inter-bank framework for transfers and messaging built on the blockchain was an โ€œexcitingโ€ idea. However, the use case for Rippleโ€™s currency (launched later as XRP), was something he โ€œnever really saw.โ€

When asked about the myriad of cryptocurrencies on the open market and their potential in the broader financial market, Rose said:

“Itโ€™s early days. I think that this is going to be a space that will continue to mature over the next couple of decades.”

He further notes thereโ€™s a โ€œgood chanceโ€ one wonโ€™t even know they are using cryptocurrencies, even as a user interacts with a blockchain-based platform and oversees settlements taking place on distributed ledgers. Such developments, Rose adds, will โ€œmost likelyโ€ happen in a simple and easy-to-use interface โ€œby a very trusted brand.โ€

The future is digital

Meanwhile, he noted 99 percent of all crypto projects in the market are โ€œin it for the pure financial gain.โ€ His comment is not invalid โ€” most projects after 2017โ€™s infamous ICO boom have been inactive, with no working applications present and a complete lack of transparency about where billions in funds were utilized.

But despite the โ€œgarbage,โ€ there are still high-quality projects in the market. Rose adds thereโ€™s โ€œno doubtโ€ the future of currency will be digital.

Rippleโ€™s XRP remains in a gray area. The firm has infamously stated all enterprise development work, at Ripple Labs, is independent of what XRP does as a token. Critics term it a โ€œnever-ending ICO,โ€ and have even launched lawsuits for clarity on the matter.

But despite the crypto communityโ€™s reaction to XRP, its development team has been active in product upgrades. Last week, XRP devs unveiled wallet deletion for the protocolโ€™s users, a first in the crypto space, alongside several amendments being actively worked on as listed on the XRP Ledger blog.

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