While Ripple’s market position strengthens with a $40 billion valuation and major acquisitions, the XRP community finds itself increasingly divided over fundamental questions about the ledger’s future.
Tensions are rising between those focused on infrastructure and those prioritizing regulatory acceptance. It’s becoming a real problem.
The split became more visible following David Fuelling’s proposal to restructure the XRPL Foundation governance. His plan includes a “Sustaining Member” category with hefty fees – something many community members view as Ripple’s attempt to tighten control.
Ripple CTO David Schwartz praised the proposal’s clarity, but skeptics aren’t buying it.
Infrastructure concerns took center stage when Alloy Networks announced its departure, taking essential peering servers with it.
Crypto Eri didn’t hold back, blasting the “no incentive is the best incentive” philosophy that’s left validators supporting the network without compensation. Turns out free work has its limits.
Meanwhile, policy advocates like Alex Cobb highlight legislation such as the CLARITY Act, expected for markup in 2026, as the real path forward.
They argue regulatory clarity will reveal XRP’s potential, especially with spot XRP ETFs now holding over $1.3 billion.
The technical debate intensifies around Ripple Prime’s permissioned domains – set to activate February 4, 2026, after securing 88.24% validator consensus.
J. Ayo Akinyele, Ripple’s engineering lead, emphasizes that institutions need both transparency and confidentiality. The Permissioned Domains amendment attempts to thread this needle.
RLUSD stablecoin further complicates matters, repositioning XRP from speculative asset to a coordination mechanism within Ripple’s institutional stack.
Monica Long frames XRPL as the backbone for institutional use cases, particularly stablecoin payments.
Companies announcing XRP-focused treasury strategies signal long-term confidence, but the community remains fractured.
Infrastructure builders want compensation, policy wonks want regulation, and everyone claims to know what’s best for XRP. Some investors are adopting sector-based diversification strategies to hedge against the uncertainty while maintaining exposure to XRP’s potential. Advocates maintain that focusing on price movements is noise compared to the fundamental progress being made with XRP. The recent launch of Ripple Treasury integrating traditional cash operations with digital assets adds another layer to the ongoing debate. The tension isn’t going away anytime soon.