Ripple's chief technology officer, David Schwartz, has addressed renewed controversy in the XRP community over the loss of approximately 32,000 blocks from the early days of the XRP Ledger.
His comments aim to dispel speculation that the data was deliberately erased.
The issue traces back to the earliest development phase of the XRP Ledger, the blockchain that underpins XRP. Schwartz confirmed in a social media post that the missing records were the result of a software error during testing, not a deliberate action. “Existing data wasn’t deleted to prevent further loss. There was no way to recover the lost data,” he explained.
The XRP Ledger currently begins at block number 32,570, meaning that the first 10 days of transaction data—spanning roughly 32,000 blocks—are permanently gone. This has fueled speculation in some corners of the XRP community that critical history may have been removed on purpose.
However, Schwartz was unequivocal: the blockchain was never reset because doing so would have risked erasing all blocks after the 32,000 mark, not just the early ones. A reset plan was reportedly considered but ultimately rejected to preserve the integrity and security of the remaining data.
Although the block loss was originally disclosed as far back as May, the topic resurfaced this week amid broader debates over transparency and data preservation in blockchain systems. The XRP Ledger has long touted its performance and reliability, making the revelation of permanent data loss particularly sensitive for long-term supporters.
Schwartz’s explanation emphasized that the Ripple team prioritized system stability over retroactive fixes. “There was a mistake,” he admitted, “but our decision to move forward ensured the rest of the ledger would remain secure and functional.”
With no known method to recover the lost blocks, XRP’s ledger history will forever begin at block 32,570—a rare but notable quirk in one of the world’s most-used blockchain systems.
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