The post Brad Garlinghouse Says Ripple Is Going After SWIFT, Argues XRP Is an Internet Moment for Money appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
The latest discussion on crypto Twitter centers around how global payments are still running on outdated infrastructure, and XRP is being built to fix that gap.
At a recent event, Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse delivered one of the most pointed critiques of traditional finance infrastructure. Garlinghouse didn’t just criticize the SWIFT transaction; he also analyzed why it feels outdated at its core.
That line hits because it shows how old the system really is. While communication evolved from letters to instant messaging, global payments are still relying on infrastructure designed decades ago.
Garlinghouse made it clear this isn’t just about competing with banks or SWIFT:
Right now, sending money internationally can take days, involve multiple intermediaries, and cost significant fees. Ripple’s idea is to make money move instantly, just like sending a message or an email.
To simplify it, Garlinghouse compared today’s financial system to the early days of the internet:
Back then, platforms were closed ecosystems. That’s exactly how payment networks operate today: fragmented, slow, and not fully interoperable.
Ripple, using XRP, is trying to create that “internet moment” for money, where value can move freely across networks without friction.


