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Ripple Patents XRP-Powered On-Demand Liquidity Network for Cross-Border Transactions

source-logo  dailyhodl.com 13 February 2021 10:50, UTC

Ripple has patented a network computing system for its XRP-powered cross-border payment product, On-Demand Liquidity (ODL).

The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) officially granted the patent on January 26th, according to documents filed on the USPTO website.

Ripple’s patent explains that ODL helps banks avoid keeping money tied up in the “correspondent banking” method of processing remittances.

“Current estimates indicate that on the order of ten trillion U.S. dollars in value is used as parked float sitting in nostro or other correspondent accounts throughout the world. Furthermore, any pair of banks that do not have an agreement regarding such exchanges must use other banks that do, which can drive up transaction fees and complexity…

With the advent of digital currencies and decentralized ledgers, the use of nostro accounts may be largely eliminated, releasing the parked money therein to be deployed by the banking institutions accordingly, as described herein. A computing system is provided herein that implements a cross-medium transaction service by leveraging the use of a digital currency and ledger (e.g., a decentralized, distributed ledger) to replace the need for clearing houses and/or nostro/vostro accounts. This cross-medium transaction system operates to provide on-demand liquidity for cross-medium exchanges such that fund settlements can occur at any time within seconds or fractions of a second, as opposed to several days in the current implementations.”

The subject of XRP’s utility is a key question in the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) lawsuit against Ripple, which accuses the company of illegally selling the digital asset as an unregistered security.

RippleNet general manager Asheesh Birla says ODL powered about 3 million transactions and handled $2.4 billion in notional volume in 2020.

Birla adds that the product expanded to 18 new countries and was a part of 15 new deals after the SEC filed a complaint against the San Francisco startup in late December.

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