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Ripple’s David Schwartz reveals he was never an official founder! What detail left $XRP investors surprised?

David Schwartz, CTO Emeritus of Ripple, made waves on X (formerly Twitter) after addressing his early role within Ripple and clarifying the timing and nature of his XRP-based compensation. No

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 2, 2026
3 min read
NEWS
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David Schwartz, CTO Emeritus of Ripple, made waves on X (formerly Twitter) after addressing his early role within Ripple and clarifying the timing and nature of his XRP-based compensation. Noting widespread confusion, Schwartz commented on a circulating screenshot that showed internal Ripple team members and their respective XRP allocations, drawing a distinction between himself and the official group of Ripple founders.

Schwartz reflects on his earliest days at Ripple

The image in question referenced a “cryptographer 1,” described as Ripple’s chief cryptographer until July 2018 and later its technology head—an unmistakable nod to Schwartz, who responded with characteristic wit to confirm the reference.

“These are pretty funny. In fact, I’m literally wearing a ‘cryptographer 1’ T-shirt right now.”

David Schwartz is widely recognized as a leading force behind Ripple and the development of the XRP Ledger. While he stepped back from active management, he holds the title of CTO Emeritus, a distinction for seasoned executives who retain advisory and technical clout within an organization.

Mini glossary: “CTO emeritus” is an honorary title given to a company’s former technology lead who has relinquished daily managerial duties but still provides institutional and technical guidance.

When an X user asked why Schwartz wasn’t listed among the founders while the other two were cited for their XRP-based compensation, Schwartz directly addressed the question. He explained that he was never officially counted as a Ripple founder and only received XRP payment much later, not during the company’s initial period.

“Generally, I’m not considered a Ripple founder and received any XRP payment at a much later stage.”

The crucial distinction between XRP Ledger and Ripple emerges

According to available accounts, Schwartz, Jed McCaleb, and Arthur Britto began developing the XRP Ledger in 2011, inspired by the limitations of Bitcoin. Their mission: building digital asset infrastructure tailored specifically for payments, with more sustainability and flexibility than Bitcoin. XRP Ledger officially launched in June 2012.

Soon after, Chris Larsen joined the team and the group incorporated a company—initially named NewCoin, then quickly rebranded as OpenCoin, and later as Ripple. This chronology helps explain why, despite Schwartz being an original architect of XRP Ledger, he is not counted as a founding member of the company that grew into Ripple.

MilestoneDetails2011Schwartz, McCaleb, and Britto begin work on the XRP LedgerJune 2012XRP Ledger is launchedSeptember 2012NewCoin is established, later rebranded OpenCoin and ultimately RippleSchwartz’s positionNot a founder, but an original technical team member

Internal role changes at Ripple revisited

Schwartz first joined Ripple as chief cryptographer during its OpenCoin phase, before being appointed Chief Technology Officer in 2018. Following his retirement from hands-on leadership, he was granted the honorary role of CTO Emeritus. His recent clarifications highlight the long-standing separation between the founding structure of Ripple the company and the technological underpinnings of the XRP Ledger.

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