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Booming Crypto Assets, Facebook Quickly Releases Diem Digital Money

CNBC International - Facebook's plans to launch its own cryptocurrency have not died down. This intention will be realized this year after changing the name from Libra to Diem.

Reported by CNBC International, Tuesday (20/4/2021), Facebook's cryptocurrency was first introduced in June 2019 under the name libra, this digital token was originally intended as a universal currency that is used to transfer money as easily as sending a message.

But after facing strong opposition from regulators around the world, the organization overseeing the project lost key backers including Visa and Mastercard. The group eventually watered down its plan, choosing several “stablecoins” or digital money that was linked directly to official money issued by the central bank such as the US dollar and the euro.

Now known as Diem, the Facebook-backed digital coin is expected to launch later this year, albeit in a much more limited form. Diem is currently in talks with Swiss financial regulators to obtain a payments license, an important step that will put the organization further on the path towards its digital currency project.

"A big step up from our dialogue with regulators has been a phased approach to roll out," Christian Catalini, Diem's ​​chief economist, told CNBC's Joumanna Bercetche last month.

“We will be phasing out different functions and uses, applications in different areas,” he said, adding that members of these cryptocurrencies – both large and small – must undergo strict anti-money laundering checks.

However, some consultants have responded cynically to this. Given Facebook's broad reach, which had 2.8 billion monthly active users in the fourth quarter of 2020, central banks and politicians fear the currency could threaten monetary stability and potentially allow money laundering.

Facebook's involvement also means there are concerns about how Facebook will protect user privacy. “That is a tremendous challenge to the international order, because the backlash is so strong,” said Michael Casey, chief content officer of cryptocurrency media CoinDesk.

One big concern, Casey said, was that Diem was threatening the dominance of the US dollar. Two months after Facebook launched Libra, former Bank of England Governor Mark Carney proposed a new digital currency based on the global basket of goods that could reduce the dollar's status as the world's reserve currency.

Diem's ​​technology has "changed dramatically over the past year and a half from a naive blockchain to a very sophisticated blockchain that you can see trying to answer some of the questions regulators have," said Ran Goldi, CEO of Digital Assets Group, which is building the infrastructure for traders. accept diem as payment method.

Even so, there are some opinions that are optimistic about this digital currency, given its extraordinary prospects around the world.

“I think it will pass the gates this year,” said Michael Gronager, CEO of blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis. “It will be an opportunity not to be missed,” he added.

Libra - Regulations Can Live in Harmony


Recently we were shocked by the existence of several companies that canceled the collaboration with Libra Facebook. But this is not a blow to Libra. Libra will continue to strive towards regulation. Libra will not be launched without the supervision of appropriate regulations and handle legitimate issues. The information we got from Libra tweet "Regulations can live in harmony."

"We have said from the beginning that Libra must not and will not be launched without the supervision of appropriate regulations and handle legitimate issues. Every time someone agrees with us, it is not a" blow "or" setback. "Innovation and regulation can live in harmony "@Libra_.


This gets a tweet response from @JoeSmo05464358 "Yes, by definition" agree "with you, I don't think anyone believes it will be a 'blow' or 'setback.' Hopefully, your governance is better than your grammar lol, " said Joe Smo.



On the same occasion, Libra also received a good response from @MAEHusseini. In his Twitter response saying "You have to start by collecting various regulations related to @libra, provide economical analysis and run AI on top. Reach a general understanding, set principles, and create #Model #law that fits between different jurisdictions. " said Mehdi El Husseini (@Davidmarcus).



Karim Naufal (@mysticaltech) also added that: Well said! Keep up the good work. You are a trailblazer. Someone has to do this hard work sooner or later ... It is in the government's interest to ensure that regulated #cryptocurrency like #Libra sees the light of today, otherwise unregulated alternatives will develop!



Maybe we need to question the meaning of @mysticaltech tweet that states "unregulated alternatives will develop!". Does he mean about Bitcoin which has not been regulated by anyone?

This is different from the response given by Conner Brown. We said from the beginning that libra should be an accessible bitcoin wallet. Every time you ignore it just shows your incompetence and ignores financial freedom. Bitcoin and Facebook can live harmoniously, said @_ConnerBrown_



So what has been the response of cryptocurrency users who have been adapting so much about Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP and other coins that have cryptocurrency without regulation?

Libra Facebook.

Bitcoin Scaling Issues Forcing Facebook to Make Libra.


Libra exists due to the presence of Bitcoin. As much as it proved by itself since Satoshi's creation laid the foundation for each crypto asset that was followed. The extent to which Bitcoin is responsible for spawning Facebook's currency has now been made very clear in an interview with Abra's Bill Barhydt. The investment platform CEO claims that Facebook wants to integrate BTC directly into its billions of powerful social networks - but was forced to create Libra instead because of Bitcoin's inability to scale.

How is the Inability of Bitcoin to Weigh Libra Projects Issued

On the What Bitcoin Did podcast last week, host Peter McCormack entertained Bill Barhydt of Abra, who revealed insider knowledge about the development decisions that guided Project Libra. Before Facebook went ahead with plans to create a stable currency, Facebook had explored the possibility of integrating Bitcoin, Barhydt claims. The plan is to activate BTC as a payment option in the entire Facebook ecosystem.

"Ideally, from my discussion, [Facebook] actually prefers using Bitcoin. I think there are people who really believe in this system, "ventured Barhydt. The idea of   Facebook supporting BTC in the world's largest social network, and it's likely that the second and seventh largest (Instagram and Whatsapp) might seem strange, and we might not be never known for sure whether this was the original plan, but Bill Barhydt was well connected, and so his comments were quite influential, when he told Peter McCormack:
If you want to build a money transfer system and you want to build a cross-border trading system and you have 1.2 billion users today, what will happen to Bitcoin? Costs will skyrocket. Doing anything with Bitcoin that is transactional effectively cannot be maintained.
LIBRA DEEP DIVE

Why Bitcoin Will Not Scale

Facebook embraces Bitcoin, regardless of what people think about the tech giant, it will be very bullish for BTC and for the cryptosphere as a whole. The 1.2 billion people who are introduced to healthy money, even in a clean Facebook walled environment, will be huge. That did not happen, due to the inability of Bitcoin to support the number of transactions that could potentially flow through the network as a result.

The inability of Bitcoin to scale has certainly been a matter of intense debate in the community for years, causing deep cracks and resulting in permanent divisions that occurred when Bitcoin Cash was cut in mid-2017. BCH supporters have long accused the developers of Bitcoin Core, led by Blockstream loyalists, who do not want to substantially increase the block size to allow more transactions per second (tps). Since increasing the block size to four times the BTC, BCH can theoretically process around 100 tps, and offer transaction costs that are currently 113X cheaper.

Increasing block size is a simple but effective scaling solution that has allowed Bitcoin Cash to process hundreds of thousands of transactions a day on a test - more than enough to absorb the demands of large companies like Facebook that are entering into a fuss, for example. Critics will note that there are limits on expanding block size, beyond that centralization occurs because of the difficulty of users being able to run nodes to verify transactions independently. The sweet spot beyond the unwanted need to continue to increase the block's capacity blindly is a matter of debate. What is clear, however, is that the decision by Bitcoin Core developers and their helpers to keep the BTC blocks as small as possible has pushed businesses away from Bitcoin and reduced merchant adoption.

Adoption of Emptiness

Instead of scaling Bitcoin, Core supporters have pushed the layer two solutions they are very proud of, Lightning Network, to take the burden. But there is a problem with that approach: Lightning is still not ready for production, and maybe years away from being suitable for company adoption. Only last month, a critical bug was discovered in the protocol, considered so severe that it wasn't even revealed until all nodes had the opportunity to update to patched software. The incompatibility of Bitcoin as a payment system, coupled with the Lightning mismatch for almost anything other than buying stickers, has led to an adoption vacuum. Businesses, including Facebook, if Abra's CEO wants to be trusted, wants to use the network but can't do it.

'These are smart - people,' said Barhydt from the Facebook blockchain team. "They have seen Lighting, they have seen Bitcoin, they have thought about this. And they came to the conclusion that Bitcoin is not optimized to be a payment network, Bitcoin is optimized to be digital money now. "Proponents of Bitcoin Cash will agree that BTC is not optimized to function as a payment network, but will refuse at the time. Suggestions that it is capable of functioning as digital cash now - it is a use case that BCH is currently fulfilling more successfully.

Even with larger block size, there may be technical or other regulatory obstacles that prevent Facebook from using BTC. What can be stated with certainty, is that the inability of Bitcoin to scale, coupled with the complexity of Lightning, and the security issues and UX that accompany it, has created a perfect storm. Into this vortex eye has stepped on the Libra Project, the biggest demonstration yet of what happened when the P2P payment network stopped functioning as digital money.

Do you think Facebook is seriously considering using Bitcoin? Let us know in the comments section below.

Source: Bitcoin.com
Libra Facebook

Facebook Inc. plans to launch a digital currency (cryptocurrency) named Libra.


The launch of this digital currency has expanded the Facebook business network not only to social networks but also extends to e-commerce and digital payments at the global level.

The company has been connected with 28 partners based in Geneva, Switzerland called the Libra Association. The presence of this association will regulate the work of new digital coins which will be launched in the first half of 2020, according to executives.

Facebook has also created a subsidiary called Calibra, which will offer digital wallets for storing, sending and offering Libra.

Later Calibra will be connected to the Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp platforms which now have one billion users.

The company, based in Menlo Park, California, has high hopes for Libra, but is still hampered by privacy protection policies and personal data that consumers can stumbling block in the future.

However, the company founded by Mark Zuckerberg has an ambition that Libra is not only strengthens electronic transactions between upper middle class consumers and global business networks, but also offers consumers untouched access to banking finance.

The use of the Libra name itself was inspired by heavy gauges in Roman times, as a sign of astrology to symbolize justice and freedom, according to former PayPal executive David Marcus who led the Facebook project.

"Freedom, justice and money, that's exactly what we are trying to do here," Marcus said, as reported by Reuters on Tuesday (6/18).

To launch this digital currency, Facebook must be willing to reach deeper pockets so that it drains revenue from Facebook instant messaging application.

This is a consequence that has already happened to Chinese social applications such as WeChat.

Facebook executives claim to have reported to regulators in the United States and abroad regarding the launch of this cryptocurrency.

Unfortunately they did not want to specify what regulators or institutions to apply for the financial permit.

Facebook Blockchain Product Vice President Kevin Weil hopes that global regulators can approve this plan so that this product can be widely marketed.

"This gives us the basis to go on and have productive conversations with regulators around the world. We really want to do that," Weil said.

The launch of Libra comes when Facebook is struggling in a number of scandals, so they must face the problem of protecting privacy and personal data of users, policy regulators and members of parliament.

Some opponents of Facebook even called the company to be punished or broken down by force due to errors in handling user data.

In addition, Facebook is considered unable to filter hoax information in the 2019 American elections allegedly conducted by Russia.

The question will arise how the parliament or regulator's reaction to Facebook plan to enter the world of cryptocurrency is currently not officially regulated.

Moreover, in recent years, cryptocurrency investors have lost hundreds of millions of dollars as a result of hackers and the market has also been plagued by allegations of money laundering, drug sales and terrorist funding.

Source: tribunnews.com/bisnis/