Justin Bons, founder and CIO of Cyber Capital, has sparked intense discussions within the crypto community by accusing Ripple’s XRP of misleading investors regarding its decentralization. Bons shared a detailed 25-point thread on Twitter, outlining his concerns about XRP’s architecture and the claims made by its executives.
Justin Bons’ Fiery Take on XRP
Bons began by asserting that Ripple is “centralized and permissioned,” directly challenging statements from the firm’s leadership. He stated, “XRP is misleading investors by lying about its decentralization. The foundation has total control over the network!” Bons argued that attracting retail buyers with such claims amounts to “straight-up fraud.”
At the core of Bons’ critique is XRP’s consensus mechanism, which he described as being based on Unique Node Lists (UNLs). “XRPs consensus is based on UNLs—literal centralized lists of trusted nodes released by single parties, including the foundation,” Bons explained. He emphasized that XRP’s system relies on Proof of Authority (PoA) rather than the more commonly used Proof of Stake (PoS) or Proof of Work (PoW) mechanisms.
1/25) Ripple is centralized & permissioned, contrary to the claims made by its executives
XRP is misleading investors by lying about its decentralization
The foundation has total control over the network!
Attracting retail buyers with such false claims is straight-up fraud! ⚠️
— Justin Bons (@Justin_Bons) December 2, 2024
“This design is not decentralized,” he added, noting that Ripple’s claims of being more decentralized than Bitcoin (BTC) or Ethereum (ETH) are misleading. Bons referenced XRPL’s own documentation, stating: “You will be hard-pressed to find any researcher outside of XRP to call this design ‘decentralized.’”
Other Critical Flaws
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He elaborated on the role of UNLs, arguing that while users can technically modify their own lists, this does not equate to trustlessness. “Truly decentralized cryptocurrencies are ‘trustless,’ in that ZERO ‘trust’ is required,” Bons stated. He explained that choosing which nodes to trust inherently introduces trust into the system, which contradicts the principle of trustlessness central to decentralized systems like Bitcoin.
Bons further criticized the network’s reliance on a 90% overlap between UNLs to maintain consensus. He claimed, “If there is insufficient overlap between your UNL and the rest of the network, you will get kicked off!” He added, “Resistance is futile,” emphasizing the inflexibility of the system.
Bons’ remarks also highlighted Ripple’s control over the network, stating that nodes outside approved UNLs are effectively excluded from participating in consensus. “Even if nodes outside of approved lists are untrusted, they do not participate in consensus,” he said, describing this as a critical flaw in XRP’s decentralization claims.
However, the XRP community was quick in responding as they called out the several discrepancies in Bons’ thread. Moreover, they continued expressing confidence toward the Ripple ecosystem as the RLUSD launch is anticipated this week with spot XRP ETFs debuting in 2025.