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  • Anjali Belgaumkar
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    Writer by choice, CryptoCurrency Writer, and Researcher by chance. Currently, focusing on financial news and analysis, as well as cryptocurrency news and data. One may not call me a crypto “Enthusiast” but trust me I'm getting there.

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Ripple’s AI Finds 10 Bugs in the XRP Ledger; But The Community Shouldn’t Panic

The XRP Ledger has been running without interruption since 2012. It has processed over 100 million ledgers, completed more than 3 billion transactions, and secured billions of dollars in value. By any measure, that is an impressive track record.

But Ripple is not resting on it.

In a detailed post published on March 26, Ripple engineer Ayo Akinyele revealed that the team has overhauled its entire security approach, deploying artificial intelligence to hunt for vulnerabilities deep inside the XRPL codebase. And the AI has already found things humans missed.

The AI Red Team Is Already Working

Ripple has established a dedicated AI-assisted red team whose sole job is to stress-test the XRP Ledger the way an attacker would. The results have been striking. The team has already uncovered more than 10 bugs, with only low-severity issues disclosed publicly so far. All are being actively fixed.

To be clear, none of these were catastrophic. But the fact that a decade-old system is still yielding new vulnerabilities under AI scrutiny tells you something important: the old way of testing was not thorough enough, and Ripple knows it.

“AI allows us to shift from reactive debugging to proactive, systematic discovery of vulnerabilities,” Akinyele wrote, “strengthening the ledger faster and with greater confidence than ever before.”

Why Now?

The timing is not accidental. The XRP Ledger is no longer just a payments rail. It is being positioned as infrastructure for tokenized real-world assets, institutional DeFi, and global financial settlement. The stakes are higher than they have ever been, and Ripple is adjusting its security posture accordingly.

The next XRPL software release will be dedicated entirely to bug fixes and improvements, with zero new features. That is a significant signal. In an industry obsessed with shipping new things, choosing to stop and fix what exists is a mature and frankly reassuring decision.

What Is Changing

Beyond the AI red team, Ripple is also requiring multiple independent security audits before any major network change goes live, expanding its bug bounty programme to bring in outside researchers, and running “attackathons” where new features are deliberately tested in hostile environments before they touch the main network.

The codebase itself is also being modernised, addressing structural issues like inconsistent feature interactions and undocumented assumptions that have quietly built up over more than a decade of development.

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