Ripple is a cutting-edge Silicon Valley tech start-up with ambitions to one day be “to payments as Amazon was to books”. [...] Spanish bank Santander, a Ripple investor and what the company calls “one of our largest and most important customers”, recently chose not to use Ripple’s XRP currency for its new international payment network. [...] ..it’s come to FT Alphaville’s attention recently that some Wikipedia users — two in particular — have been repeatedly editing Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse’s Wikipedia page to remove some less positive aspects of the entry. Specifically, these two users have been removing text under the “Controversies” section of the page, and one of them in fact removed the whole section entirely, before it was reinstated by a different Wikipedia editor. The Controversies section includes the fact that Garlinghouse had claimed multiple times that the published error rate for SWIFT messaging was at least six per cent (a claim that has been proven to be false in a great piece by Martin Walker published by the London School of Economics Business Review); the fact that he’d been personally named in a group of class actions against Ripple that claim the company has breached various securities laws; and the fact he’d admitted that, without sales of the XRP cryptocurrency, Ripple would be lossmaking [...] # Crypto propaganda wars So there’s been something of an “edit war” on the page, with multiple removals and reinstatements of text since May. [...] Continua su https://ftalphaville.ft.com/2020/08/20/1597909956000/Who-s-been-editing-the-... o su https://technocodex.com/whos-been-editing-the-ripple-ceos-wikipedia-page/ La questione è interessante non tanto per le manomissioni di Wikipedia a fini propagandistici (piuttosto consueti nel mondo politico in prossimità delle elezioni) ma perché Ripple è spesso citato come esempio di blockchain "enterprise", addirittura uno strumento b2b per banche, un esempio "virtuoso" a riprova della serietà della fuffa blockchain. Giacomo