Despite all the furious debate happening here about XRP distribution, I suspect OpenCoin is gonna do exactly what they said they were gonna do, mostly because they consider giveaways as a better way to achive faster adoption (no non-nerdy human being can ever understand mining) and they also consider how the initial 50% of coins were distributed to be completely irrelevant to
subsequent evolution of the ripple network.
Assuming OpenCoin sticks to their plan, I see two scenarios from here:
1. OpenCoin allows a few more gateways first.
2. They open the source and publish a paper.
3. Ripple gets slashdotted as "next or successor to Bitcoin"
(at this point no fork will survive because the only viable market in BTC/XRP already exists ONLY in the original distribution through bitstamp)
3. This is where they decide how to continue distributing XRPs
a. They simply keep dripping them out at the current rate of roughly 100 new accounts per day perhaps rising slowly to 1000 accounts per day by end of the year
b. They decide to do a mass distribution to millions of people ...
Let's analyse, these two cases separately
A. Things take a lot longer to launch the dripping out of XRPs continues, new gateways and nodes appear but all the activity in the network is purely for trading of BTCs vs XRPs and various fiat IOUs.
after a while ripple becomes big enough to make MtGox problem go away ... this slow evolution continues for a while until they feel confident that next 100,000 accounts can be created and the corresponding next batch of XRPs can be released. If some actual
economic transactional activity appears on ripple beyond it serving as a distributed exchange, then they will be managing the floating XRP supply to track transaction volume and they will keep a ceiling on XRP price to prevent bubbles like BTC has in the summer 2011 ...
B. After all the euphoria of a mass Ripple distribution has subsided and the millions have happily handed over their tiny XRP allocations to the large XRP hoarders (hey dude, I just got some weird free internet money it's like $10 I can go out and buy some burgers). This process will be very similar to what happened during privatisation of Soviet State property (all the productive resource and mineral wealth of the Russian empire) after the collapse of the soviet union. Each household was given "vouchers" for shares in multiple state-own companies but at the same time inflation and hard economic times simply forced all those vouchers to be quickly sold for far below their real value to those who became The Oligarchs like this guy (
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rkB9OT2XVvA ).
4. Either way this goes, the sober financial types will eventually understand the following:
Yes Ripple has all the good attributes of Bitcoin and removes its 7 TPS transaction limit and other scalability bottlenecks, its allows transactions in any asset (not just currency) class, allows lines of trust, IOUs, etc, etc, etc ... basically it's the iPad to Bitcoin's Linux 1.0.
However, and here's the crucial problem with ripple (although it need NOT be fatal): Ripple XRPs do NOT have any counter party risk (like gold, silver or vanilla (non-IOU) BTCs)
but
Ripple network has Inherent Systemic Risk which comes from unpredictability of if and when a massive disgorgement from the remaining 50% of the ripple hoard might occur.
This massive dump of XRPs can happen with or without OpenCoin, Inc or their founders wishes. Competent divorce lawyers for one of the founder's wives can extract her few billion XRPs and she can decide to dump ALL of them at once even tho it might be against her own economic interests, simply to destroy her ex-hubby's legacy. Another way would be for OpenCoin or its founders to be compelled to release the keys to XRP Fort Knox by some law suit or simply by G-men threatening them with charges.
This Systemic Risk does not exist in Bitcoin, therefore Bitcoin makes for a better "store of value" currency, while ripple XRPs might make for a a better "transactional currency".
In conclusion:
1. Both systems have the essential attribute of
Finite Upper Bound on total possible number of currency units and therefore both posses "Scarcity" attribute (although in Ripple disgorgement might make scarcity "volatile")
2. Both systems have are very useful, therefore a market price for Ripple will emerge just like it has emerged for Bitcoin.
In the long run total
relative market capitalization of both systems will depend on their usefulness (as store or value or transactions or a mix of the two).
Let the race begin ... (I guess the real start of the race will be the release of Ripple source code)
Cheers ....