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The turbulence in the crypto market often comes one after another. Recently, the XRP ecosystem has once again sparked a wave of public opinion — the founder is sued, a $30 million claim has been brought to light, and the community has immediately shifted from a regular holding pattern to a state of high alert. Discussions on major trading platforms have skyrocketed.
The key information of the event is as follows: According to legal documents, a core figure in the XRP ecosystem has been sued over a financial dispute, with a claim amounting to $30 million. As soon as this figure appeared, many investors instinctively recalled the lengthy SEC lawsuit from four years ago. Back then, the SEC sued Ripple on the grounds of "unregistered securities," and this tug-of-war pushed XRP’s price from $1.50 down to $0.30. Countless bottom-fishers suffered heavy losses during this operation.
However, there is a crucial distinction worth understanding deeply: the current $30 million claim is fundamentally different from the SEC lawsuit of that time. The core dispute in the SEC case was centered on the "security classification" of XRP — whether XRP qualifies as an unregistered security. The court’s final ruling adopted a "scenario segmentation" approach: XRP is not considered a security in the context of open market trading, but it falls under the security category in institutional targeted sales. Although this case seems different in its trajectory, regulatory signals still warrant vigilance.
From a technical and ecological development perspective, XRP’s positioning as a cross-border payment tool is clear. The key point is that every legal challenge re-ignites market considerations about compliance, and this uncertainty often serves as a significant catalyst for price fluctuations. The progress of this case is likely to become an important reference for judging XRP’s medium-term trend and the overall stance on token regulation.
History always repeats itself. How is it another 30 million trap?
I still remember that wave with the SEC, it was really incredible. Dropped from 1.5 to 0.3. So many people got caught and lost.
Is this time different? But I still feel something's off...
Compliance is basically a game of probabilities, betting on how the court will rule.
Cross-border payments are clear, but legal risks always come first.
Right now, I see XRP like a ticking time bomb, not knowing when it will explode.
Can it really turn around this time? I need to wait a bit longer.
That SEC wave was already tough enough, now there's another 30 million, it feels like this ecosystem is just a legal machine.
Wait, this time seems different? Not a securities issue? Then I better take a good look before saying anything.
XRP's cross-border payment logic is fine, but every time there's a lawsuit, it drops a bit, which is exhausting.
Where will it go in the mid-term? Who knows... regulation is unpredictable.
We've already endured the SEC wave; what's there to panic about now?
A 30 million claim sounds intimidating, but it's really not on the same scale as securities litigation.
Still need to be cautious about regulatory signals? I think traders are just looking for an excuse to dump.
Compliance considerations are one thing, but the cross-border payment functionality hasn't changed.
Let's wait and see the follow-up developments. Anyway, it's just another excuse to harvest retail investors.
This time it's different from the SEC's approach, but honestly I still don't quite trust 🤷
Legal lawsuits are always price killers, regardless of the reason.