
★ Organization
Ripple Labs
Business · Cryptocurrency · Technology & AI
- Actions
- 3
- Topics
- 9
- Sectors
- 2
Ripple Labs is an American technology company founded in 2012 and headquartered in San Francisco, California, that develops enterprise blockchain products built on the XRP Ledger and other networks. Originally launched under the name OpenCoin, the company was rebranded to Ripple Labs in 2015. Its platform is designed to facilitate digital payments and asset transfer for financial institutions and enterprises.
Sectors
Actions
Includes actions Ripple Labs appears on directly, plus actions flagged against the sectors it belongs to.
Trump's two top market regulators launch joint 'Project Crypto'
Cryptocurrency sector — A coordinated CFTC/SEC framework for digital assets gives the crypto industry the regulatory clarity it has lobbied for, lowering legal risk for exchanges, custodians, and token issuers across the board.
Corporations pledge funding for Trump's $300M White House ballroom
Listed as a corporate donor pledging a contribution to Trump's White House ballroom project; no specific dollar amount disclosed.
Trump orders Labor Department to allow alternative assets in 401(k)s
Cryptocurrency sector — The same order also expands the addressable market for crypto-asset products inside retirement plans, a tailwind for digital-asset issuers and exchanges seeking distribution into mainstream retirement savings.
Trump's SEC ends Biden-era Ripple Labs crypto enforcement case
Had the SEC's active lawsuit and appeals against it dropped, ending years of high-profile litigation; retains the $125 million fine and injunction but avoids further enforcement escalation.
Trump order expedites federal permits for AI data centers
Technology & AI sector — Enables and accelerates the buildout of AI infrastructure to support the AI transformation
Ripple Labs donates $4.89M to Trump-Vance inaugural
Donated $4,889,345 to the Trump-Vance Inaugural Committee.
Trump's SEC crypto enforcement falls 60% in first year
Cryptocurrency sector — A 60% drop in SEC crypto enforcement actions and a ~97% drop in monetary penalties lowers the cost of doing business for digital-asset firms industry-wide, beyond the handful of cases that were individually dismissed.