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David Schwartz Links Etymology Debate With Bitcoin Ownership Dispute

On May 27, 2026 by voice

David “JoelKatz” Schwartz turned a casual X exchange into a broader discussion about language, logic, and crypto governance. The Ripple CTO emeritus pushed back against the idea that a word’s origin decides its current meaning, pointing instead to how people use language today.

Schwartz touched on password-verification behavior and later made a short comment on a Bitcoin ownership dispute, saying “$BSV might honor it.” Together, the posts show how one thread moved from word history to security design and blockchain enforcement.

Schwartz Challenges Word-Origin Arguments

Schwartz’s language debate began after a user asked why “laser” still appears in capital letters if it is not currently treated as an acronym. Schwartz had argued that “laser” was an acronym, but that its origin does not dictate its current use. In the same exchange, he said the notion that a word’s origin controls its present nature or usage is a fallacy.

Notably, a New York lawsuit is reportedly seeking ownership of 39,069 dormant Bitcoin wallets holding about 3.79 million $BTC. Coin Edition reported that the claimant, identified as “Noah Doe,” argues that New York abandoned property laws may allow lost or inactive crypto assets to be reassigned when owners cannot be identified or contacted.

Those wallets reportedly include addresses tied to early Bitcoin miners, Casascius physical coins, unknown holders, hacked funds, and wallets some market observers believe may belong to Satoshi Nakamoto. That scale makes the case unusually sensitive, as the assets would be worth hundreds of billions of dollars at current prices.

Related: Bitmine Immersion Makes Russell 1000 Preliminary List

Bitcoin Criticism Adds Context

Schwartz’s reply also fits a wider pattern in his recent Bitcoin commentary. Earlier this month, Coin Edition reported that he criticized Bitcoin’s proof-of-work incentive model, arguing that mining rewards create friction between users and miners. According to that report, Schwartz said miners benefit from higher fees, while users want lower transaction costs and smoother settlement.

He has also contrasted Bitcoin’s mining model with the $XRP Ledger, which does not use mining rewards. In his view, reward-based block production can create artificial stakeholders and push networks toward expensive competition.

That older criticism connects indirectly to the dormant-wallet lawsuit. Both debates center on who controls a blockchain system in practice. In mining, Schwartz questions whether incentives align with users. In the lawsuit, his reply questions whether outside legal claims can alter ownership without network consent.

Meanwhile, Schwartz has also warned $XRP Ledger users about a rise in airdrop and giveaway scams. In a May 14 post, he said scam activity targeting XRPL users had escalated and warned that anyone claiming to be him on Instagram, Telegram, or similar platforms is likely a scammer.

Related: SEC Clears Nasdaq Bitcoin Options as CFTC Review Still Looms

$BSV Remark Enters Bitcoin Ownership Debate

Schwartz’s shortest reply came in a crypto-law discussion. When another user suggested that a court might someday approve a questionable ownership claim over dormant Bitcoin, Schwartz responded, “$BSV might honor it.”

That comment referred to a wider debate over a lawsuit seeking legal recognition over tens of thousands of dormant Bitcoin wallets. Reports described a claim involving more than 39,000 wallets and roughly 3.79 million $BTC, including addresses linked in public discussion to early miners and other dormant holders.

The legal question differs from the technical one. Courts can issue rulings about property claims, but Bitcoin transfers still require valid private keys or network-level changes. Bitcoin’s base network has no central operator that can move coins from dormant wallets just by receiving a legal order.

Schwartz’s $BSV remark pointed to a distinction between blockchain networks. Bitcoin SV has long been associated with governance debates tied to Craig Wright and legal claims around Bitcoin’s history. Critics and supporters have argued over whether a chain should ever recognize external legal rulings that affect token ownership.

For Bitcoin itself, enforcement would face a practical limit. A court order cannot sign a transaction from a wallet without access to the private key. It also cannot force independent node operators worldwide to accept a software change unless the network chooses to run it.

Across these posts, Schwartz moved between three subjects: language, password systems, and blockchain enforcement. Each topic carried the same underlying theme. Origins, assumptions, and legal labels do not always decide present reality. Current usage defines words. Actual verification schemes decide password behavior. Network rules and private keys decide whether dormant Bitcoin can move.

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