Just saw David Schwartz break down something that's pretty fundamental about XRP Ledger - and honestly, it's worth understanding if you're holding or thinking about the network.



So here's the key thing: valid XRP transactions are unblockable. Not in a marketing sense, but actually by design. Schwartz was explaining that because XRPL runs on decentralized validators and consensus rules, no single entity - not even Ripple itself - can just reverse or freeze a transaction once it's valid.

What's interesting is how this actually works under the hood. The network doesn't rely on corporate control or centralized gatekeepers. Instead, transactions follow protocol-driven rules. Even if a majority of validators wanted to mess with things, they still can't fabricate XRP, seize your funds, or censor legitimate transactions. That's not just policy - that's how the code actually functions.

I think people sometimes miss this when they worry about Ripple's influence. Schwartz addressed that directly - the concern about institutional control through Ripple's Unique Node List? He basically said that's not how it works. The network's operations are governed by decentralized rules, not corporate discretion.

The escrow mechanics are another good example. Funds locked in escrow automatically release once conditions are met. No Ripple executive can decide to hold or release them early. It's unblockable in the sense that the code executes as written, period.

With the March Devnet reboot coming up and ongoing protocol upgrades, it seems like the team is continuing to strengthen these mechanisms. The core point Schwartz was making - that valid transactions are immutable and unblockable by design - that's the foundation everything else sits on. Whether you're bullish or bearish on XRP, understanding that architectural reality matters.
XRP1,12%
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