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Author Topic: Hundi and Ripple  (Read 1949 times)
matthewh3 (OP)
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November 26, 2012, 08:33:36 PM
 #1

Is anyone on here a Hundi operator or know one?  Ever thought of the Ripple idea - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ripple_monetary_system

Quote
Ripple is an open-source software project for developing and implementing a protocol for an open decentralized payment network. In its developed form (it is not substantially implemented), the Ripple network would be a peer-to-peer distributed social network service with a monetary honour system based on trust that already exists between people in real-world social networks; this form is financial capital backed completely by social capital.
Contents  [hide]
1 Background
2 Principle
3 Comparison with existing payment systems
4 See also
5 References
6 External links
[edit]Background

Modern monetary systems are built on obligations of the participants to each other. Cash and bonds are government obligations, and loan agreements are the personal obligations of borrowers. Bank account balances are bank obligations, backed by borrower and government obligations. For an obligation to have value, the holder must trust that the issuer can supply that value. Thus the banking network can be described as a trust network.
The primary method of making payment to another participant in the system is by transferring ownership of bank obligations electronically over a chain of accounts in the banking network from payer to recipient. The banking network is essentially hierarchical, with banks acting as sole intermediary between its account-holders, and central banks acting as sole intermediary between banks. This structure means that it is simple to route payments to and from any participants, but is inherently full of single points of failure, which may also be characterized as single points of control.
[edit]Principle

The core idea of Ripple is that it should be possible to route payments through an open, arbitrary trust network, similar to how the internet routes packets of data through an open, arbitrary computer network. The advantages of such a system would be that it wouldn't be reliant on a small decision-making body at the center to set monetary policy for the entire nation; instead, it would be set in a more democratic fashion by all participants, and in theory be more responsive to regional and community needs. There would be no need for a tightly regulated institutional trust hierarchy to control the behaviour of those participants near the center: like the internet, but unlike the existing global monetary system, the Ripple network would be designed to weather the collapse of a large number of its nodes.
Note that the Ripple protocol itself wouldn't preclude a hierarchical payment structure evolving, it just allows for the possibility of other structures.
Put another way, Ripple is a system of free banking that separates the payment routing function from the credit aggregation function.
[edit]Comparison with existing payment systems

Other alternative (to standard public clearing houses such as ACH) payment/monetary systems already exist, including internet currencies such as Bitcoin and Ven, currency networks like KlickEx, or local currencies such as LETS. Ripple is fundamentally different from hierarchical models in that it provides a level playing field that treats all participants equally. Both PayPal and LETS are modelled on a single central authority that issues obligations based on its policy and handles the accounting of payments between leaf nodes. In Ripple, no node has any greater or lesser capability than any other node – this is acknowledgement that every participant in a debt-based monetary system does in fact issue their own currency (or obligations). A node's connectedness in Ripple is based on the trust of the other participants and nothing else.
In a sense, every Ripple node is like a LETS or a PayPal unto itself. Ripple could be used to connect existing alternative and mainstream payment systems into a single network.

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Stephen Gornick
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November 27, 2012, 10:16:54 AM
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Is anyone on here a Hundi operator or know one?  Ever thought of the Ripple idea - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ripple_monetary_system

But Hundi is for money transfer.  Ripple is for lending and borrowing.

Or are you thinking how this can make it so a Hundi operator can work alone?  i.e., receive cash from the sender then pushes payment to the recipient through ripple (where the recipient gets cash from someone local)?

There will be overlap between Ripple networks and Hundi operator networks but eventually there's simply going to be no need for Hundi / Hawalders -- between Bitcoin and Ripple there's no additional value they can add?

 - http://opencoin.com  <-- Now Ripple.com

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matthewh3 (OP)
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November 27, 2012, 10:46:55 AM
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Is anyone on here a Hundi operator or know one?  Ever thought of the Ripple idea - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ripple_monetary_system

But Hundi is for money transfer.  Ripple is for lending and borrowing.

Or are you thinking how this can make it so a Hundi operator can work alone?  i.e., receive cash from the sender then pushes payment to the recipient through ripple (where the recipient gets cash from someone local)?

There will be overlap between Ripple networks and Hundi operator networks but eventually there's simply going to be no need for Hundi / Hawalders -- between Bitcoin and Ripple there's no additional value they can add?

 - http://opencoin.com  <-- Now Ripple.com


Hundi like Hawala allows p2p incognito payments.  Example:  Someone in city A wants to pay someone in city B so they make a payment to their local operator in city A who informs the operator in city B to make the payment.  The balances between operator A and operator B are held on a tally and the differences settled when needed.  So 'Ripple' software could bring the age old Hundi/Hawala payments system into the internetwork age.

Yeah I've seen that link before and it looks promising.

Benson Samuel
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November 27, 2012, 12:15:12 PM
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Hawala is a good monetary system.

Ripple is better for smaller communities though.

http://bensonsamuel.com/bitcoin-3/a-decentralized-monetary-system-for-a-decentralized-currency/

That was a chat with Ryan Fugger, Founder of Ripple.

mjc
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January 10, 2013, 04:05:14 AM
 #5

Actually ripple is for currency  exchange.  I've been helping test the new ripple platform.  It's pretty cool.

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