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In Ripple news today, David Schwartz, the firm’s CTO and one of the original architects of the XRP Ledger, issued a direct public warning on May 14, 2026, alerting his 700,000+ followers on X to a sharp escalation in AI-powered deepfake scams targeting XRPL users.
The campaign involves fraudsters impersonating Ripple executives through synthetic video and fake social media profiles to promote fraudulent airdrop and giveaway schemes designed to drain holders’ wallets.
The central question this raises is not simply one of personal wallet security. What happens to retail confidence, on-chain behavior, and XRP liquidity depth when a coordinated scam campaign successfully exploits the credibility of the people most closely associated with the asset’s legitimacy?
This warning from Schwartz came as the XRP price climbed by +1.5% overnight, currently trading at $1.45 with a 24-hour trading volume of $2.16Bn.
(SOURCE: TradingView)
This is not a phishing email campaign but a video-layer social engineering attack using advanced neural networks to create deepfake videos of executives like Brad Garlinghouse and Schwartz. Scammers produce fake Ripple, or XRP-branded livestreams and claim to host airdrops or giveaways, directing victims to counterfeit domains.
In one variant, a deepfake of Garlinghouse promoted a non-existent “100 million XRP airdrop,” misleading viewers into sending a “registration amount” of XRP to scam addresses in exchange for the promise of doubling their funds. Once sent, these tokens are permanently lost.
Scammers operate on YouTube, Instagram, and Telegram, with Schwartz warning that anyone impersonating him on these platforms is likely a scammer. Ripple has no official Telegram channels and has never conducted an airdrop, making any such offers fraudulent.
The XRP holder base is largely retail, characterized by active online engagement and sensitivity to Ripple’s commentary, making it a prime target for social engineering.
As Schwartz pointed out, creating scams is easier than building something real, and the low cost of deploying deepfake campaigns allows scammers to operate continuously. This results in financial and psychological costs for holders, especially as successful incidents compound.
When scammers liquidate stolen XRP, it creates misguided selling pressure that does not reflect actual market sentiment. If retail holders begin to withdraw out of caution, amidst the ongoing tension between XRP’s post-SEC resolution and unresolved valuation gaps, this could lead to reduced on-chain volume, weaker liquidity, and diminished retail participation.
Institutional actors aren’t the primary targets, as their liquidity operates through verified frameworks that deepfake content can’t exploit. The vulnerability lies in retail, which is crucial to XRP’s overall liquidity, in contrast to the institutional narrative.
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In other Ripple news, crypto security at the retail level is not a technical problem; it is a verification discipline problem. The tools to protect against these scams are available; the gap is knowing what signals to apply and when. Schwartz’s warning is a prompt to run that checklist now, not after an interaction.
EXPLORE: Google’s Gemini AI Predicts the Price of XRP by the End of May 2026
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