

David Schwartz, chief technology officer at Ripple, has hinted at the possibility of FTX employees pursuing a career at the crypto payment company. Earlier, a similar offer was made by Schwartz to Twitter employees, who had been subjected to massive cuts as a result of the management change and the arrival of Elon Musk.
Hey @FTX_Official employees not involved in compliance, finance, or business ethics:@Ripple is always hiring.
— David "JoelKatz" Schwartz (@JoelKatz) November 10, 2022
The offers from the Ripple CTO follow the company's need and willingness to expand its workforce. As reported by U.Today, Ripple currently has more than 350 vacancies in Asia and North America. For example, a famous crypto blogger, Ben "BitBoy" Armstrong, even tried to get a job as Ripple's director of strategy in Singapore.
Likelihood of Ripple being sold to Big Techs
As well as offering jobs to employees of the defunct FTX, Schwartz also commented on the possibility of Ripple being sold to a company like Apple or Microsoft.
According to the company's technical person, this is unlikely, if only because of the presence of the XRP factor. Even if Ripple's cryptocurrency reserves are resolved, it is still unclear why a sale would happen, Schwartz says.
One possible scenario, though again not one I see as paritcularly likely, is if such a company buys Ripple without the XRP and Ripple divides the XRP proportionately among its stockholders. That solves that problem, but I still don't see why it would happen. 2/2
— David "JoelKatz" Schwartz (@JoelKatz) November 11, 2022
Could a company want RippleNet so much that we split that off and sell it to them? Then Ripple's XRP and RippleX would remain a separate company without RippleNet. I guess that's theoretically possible. But still I don't see any reason for it.
— David "JoelKatz" Schwartz (@JoelKatz) November 11, 2022
Nevertheless, if any interested company wants to buy RippleNet, it is theoretically possible to spin off the technology and sell it, and XRP and RippleX would become separate entities. However, there is absolutely no attribution to this, he concluded.