BanklessTimes
XRPLedger
Home Articles XRP Ledger Structure Questioned as Cyber Capital Raises Concerns

XRP Ledger Structure Questioned as Cyber Capital Raises Concerns

Crispus Nyaga
Crispus Nyaga
Crispus Nyaga
Author:
Crispus Nyaga
Writer
Crispus is a financial analyst with over 9 years in the industry. He covers cryptocurrencies, forex, equities, and commodities for some of the leading brands. He is also a passionate trader who operates his family account. Crispus lives in Nairobi with his wife and son.
Updated: February 25th, 2026
Editor:
Joseph Alalade
Joseph Alalade
Editor:
Joseph Alalade
News Lead and Editor
Joseph is a content writer and editor who has actively participated in crypto for over 6 years. He enjoys educating others about Web3 and covering its updates, regulatory developments, and exciting stories.
Fact Checker:
Joseph Alalade
Joseph Alalade
Fact Checker:
Joseph Alalade
News Lead and Editor
Joseph is a content writer and editor who has actively participated in crypto for over 6 years. He enjoys educating others about Web3 and covering its updates, regulatory developments, and exciting stories.
  • Cyber Capital’s Justin Bons says XRPL’s UNL makes validators effectively permissioned.
  • Bons groups XRPL with other ledgers he views as partially permissioned.
  • David Schwartz defends XRPL architecture and intent to avoid single-party control.
  • Schwartz says UNL prevents attack vectors without enabling censorship or double-spending.

A public spat has erupted in the cryptocurrency space after Cyber Capital founder and Chief Investment Officer (CIO) Justin Bons claimed the XRP Ledger (XRPL) is not a decentralized system.

Bons tweeted that the XRP ledger is “essentially permissioned” due to the Unique Node List (UNL), which contains a selection of validator nodes that are chosen by the protocol. According to Bons, this means that companies like Ripple and other affiliated parties, “hold a disproportionate amount of control” over the XRPL.

To create a truly decentralized system, the crypto space needs to ensure that “a blockchain is 100% permissionless,” and the community “needs to apply pressure for this to happen.”

Centralization Charge From Cyber Capital

In his post, Bons mentions that one factor indicating that validators in a blockchain are not truly decentralized but “functionally permissioned and under central control” is the Unique Node List (UNL) of the XRP Ledger (XRPL).

He then classifies XRPL and other systems, such as: – Canton by DLT Lab – Stellar – Hedera – Algorand as partial permissioned ledgers.

In his opinion, all consensus algorithms other than Proof of Work (PoW) and Proof of Stake (PoS) can be reduced to a simple Proof of Authority (PoA). The permissioned elements of a blockchain system are contrary to the fundamental principles of crypto.

XRP Ledger Defenders Challenge that Framing

David Schwartz, the chief architect of the XRP Ledger and the former CTO of Ripple, has been firing back at the common conspiracy theory about the United Network List (UNL). According to Schwartz, the XRP Ledger was deliberately designed to be a fully decentralized system not controlled by either Ripple or any other entity.

The regulations in place at the time of the XRP Ledger’s release were also a factor in its design. In his explanation of the UNL, Schwartz claims that the list was used to prevent denial-of-service attacks due to unbounded validator growth and to allow a node to determine when consensus had actually been reached.

Furthermore, Schwartz rebutted the idea that a validator can push a double-spend or a censorship attack. His main point was that every node in the ledger is supposed to follow the protocol rules and that the validation done by trusted validators is necessary for the transactions to be valid.

He also agrees that in case of a coordinated attack by the majority of the nodes, it is possible to split the network so that the honest nodes cannot reach consensus, but he also argues that in such a situation a dishonest node wouldn’t be able to do a successful double spend attack because other nodes would still validate transactions signed by different validators, and that the network can always choose a different UNL (unsettled nodes list) to fix the issue.

He also notes that the XRPL’s consensus rounds last about 5 seconds, reducing the likelihood that a transaction is a replay or a conflict.

READ MORE: Here’s Why the Blue-Chip Dow Jones Index is Slumping and What Next

Follow Bankless Times on Google News

We`ve got crypto covered – every trend, every insight, every move that matters. Add us to your feed and stay ahead of the market.

Contributors

Crispus Nyaga
Writer
Crispus is a financial analyst with over 9 years in the industry. He covers cryptocurrencies, forex, equities, and commodities for some of the leading brands. He is also a passionate trader who operates his family account. Crispus lives in Nairobi with his wife and son.