GiannisAnte34 wrote:thonnisbeastley wrote:GiannisAnte34 wrote:
XRP will see a huge bump if/when they win their SEC case
XRP is basically a meme at this point, akin to doge/shib. It may see a bump if they win their lawsuit but it has no long-term future in the space.

You're talking absolute nonsense. Ripple has a legitimate chance of replacing SWIFT because XRP is faster and cheaper for cross border payments. I mean you must be ignorant to the fact that XRP has already demonstrated large institutional adoption (not only exchanges as an offering for clients, but banks using Ripple network)
These crypto-mongers are so entitled. Here's a guy selling what the SEC accurately characterizes as an unregulated security (since he decides when and how much to release), and he feigns indignation. I hope they throw the book at him.
Part of the SEC complaint:
1. From at least 2013 through the present, Defendants sold over 14.6 billion units of a digital asset security called “XRP,” in return for cash or other consideration worth over $1.38 billion U.S. Dollars (“USD”), to fund Ripple’s operations and enrich Larsen and Garlinghouse. Defendants undertook this distribution without registering their offers and sales of XRP with the SEC as required by the federal securities laws, and no exemption from this requirement applied.
2. Because Ripple never filed a registration statement, it never provided investors with the material information that every year hundreds of other issuers include in such statements when soliciting public investment. Instead, Ripple created an information vacuum such that Ripple and the two insiders with the most control over it—Larsen and Garlinghouse—could sell XRP into a market that possessed only the information Defendants chose to share about Ripple and XRP.
3. Ripple engaged in this illegal securities offering from 2013 to the present, even though Ripple received legal advice as early as 2012 that under certain circumstances XRP could be considered an “investment contract” and therefore a security under the federal securities laws.
4. Ripple and Larsen ignored this advice and instead elected to assume the risk of initiating a large-scale distribution of XRP without registration.
https://www.sec.gov/litigation/complaints/2020/comp-pr2020-338.pdf
Note to investors in crypto or anything else: the SEC is your friend and is there to protect you. Those who find it too constricting are usually crooks.
Edit:
I should just let this go. If people want to sell the family cow for a few magic beans and believe in beanstalks, that's their business. But when the "absolute nonsense" card is played in defense of absolute nonsense, I guess it should be pointed out.
The idea that this stuff was developed to make cross-border transfers better-faster-cheaper is a lie. You have to tie a pork chop around its neck to get the dog to play with it. The profiteers running this scam cast about for utility for XRP to enhance sales and hit upon this slick ruse:
339. Much of the onboarding onto ODL was not organic or market-driven. Rather, it was subsidized by Ripple. Though Ripple touts ODL as a cheaper alternative to traditional payment rails, at least one money transmitter (the “Money Transmitter”) found it to be much more expensive and therefore not a product it wished to use without significant compensation from Ripple.
340. Between early 2019 and July 2020, the “Money Transmitter” conducted the overwhelming majority of XRP trading volume in connection with ODL. Ripple had to pay the Money Transmitter significant financial compensation—often paid in XRP—in exchange for the Money Transmitter’s agreement to help Ripple increase volume on ODL.
341. Specifically, from 2019 through June 2020, Ripple paid the Money Transmitter 200 million XRP, which the Money Transmitter immediately monetized by selling XRP into the public market, typically on the very days it received XRP from Ripple. The Money Transmitter publicly disclosed earning over $52 million in fees and incentives from Ripple through September 2020.
https://www.sec.gov/litigation/complaints/2020/comp-pr2020-338.pdf
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