David Schwartz, Ripple’s chief technology officer emeritus, urged the crypto industry to revisit a Stanford lecture explaining why block production rewards undermine blockchain networks like Bitcoin instead of securing them.
Schwartz shared the recording on X, saying it was the one video he wished every crypto participant would watch. The talk, originally delivered at Stanford, lays out the rationale behind the XRP Ledger’s original design choices.
Bitcoin Mining Rewards Force a Race to the Bottom
In the lecture, the architect behind the XRP Ledger argues that proof of work mining demands honest participants spend more than attackers are willing to pay. He calls this possibly the worst imaginable security model.
According to Schwartz, competitive mining pushes operators to cut every cost and exploit every available revenue stream. He cited Ethereum validators who game decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols by testing and reordering transactions for profit before sealing blocks.
“You have to be evil or you lose.”
That dynamic, Schwartz argues, leaves natural stakeholders, meaning the people who actually use the network, paying for security through fees while operators extract additional value during block production.
He says Bitcoin (BTC) miners and Ethereum stakers both fit this pattern. Both groups exist because the protocol pays them, he contends, not because they share users’ interests in keeping fees low or transactions fair.
Ripple CTO: The Best Incentive Is No Incentive
Schwartz summed up the thesis as “the best incentive is no incentive,” meaning a system works better when validators are not paid to participate. He designed the ledger in 2012 without block production rewards, relying on participants who already benefit from reliable consensus rather than on operators paid to validate transactions.
Validators on the XRPL only choose between equally valid ways to order transactions. Because there is nothing material to extract from the system, Schwartz argues there is no financial incentive to attack the network or collude against good actors.
He claims the result is lower fees, faster confirmations, and resistance to the value extraction that has plagued Ethereum’s decentralized exchanges. XRP currently trades around $1.47 while Bitcoin holds near $81,220, according to BeInCrypto data.
The argument lands as Ethereum sinks deeper into proof of stake and Bitcoin approaches a future where transaction fees must replace block subsidies. Whether Schwartz’s framework gains traction may depend on how DeFi protocols handle persistent miner extractable value losses across major networks in 2026.
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