The Phnom Penh Post

Facebook’s virtual unit Libra currency under fire

- Kevin Trublet

FACEBOOK’S planned v irtual unit Libra, a lready under heav y attack from US President Donald Trump and globa l reg ulators, faces scepticism among the wider cr y ptocurrenc­y community as well.

One theme – besides Brex it – dominated discussion among the movers and shakers from London’s financial technolog y or FinTech industr y as t hey gat hered for t heir annual get-toget her – t he f uture of v irtual currencies.

“Can I just ask you to raise your hand if you would not be willing to use Libra?” asked the moderator at an event at London’s recent “FinTech Week”.

In the room, filled with about 100 experts and media who closely track the sector, about two-thirds of participan­ts raised their hand to express distrust at the upstart currency.

Helen Disney, founder and boss of Unblocked Events, which promotes the blockchain technolog y that powers many cr y ptocurrenc­ies, ack nowledged growing doubts over who exactly would oversee and reg ulate Libra’s operation.

People are “concerned about how the governance . . . would work”, Disney said.

“The cryptocurr­ency community is very libertaria­n in thinking,” its “about giving power to the people, democratis­ation of finance, keeping away from big banks and companies who control [the] economy,” she said.

Last week’s event came one month after Facebook announced to the world its plans for the virtual currency.

Libra, which is widely regarded as a challenger to dominant global player Bitcoin, is expected to launch in the first half of next year.

Whereas Bitcoin is decentrali­sed, Libra will be co-managed by 100 partner firms, including Facebook’s newly-minted financial serv ices div ision Calibra.

The companies behind Libra – which will be backed with a basket of realworld currencies – include payment giants Visa, MasterCard and PayPal, as well as taxi-hailing services Lyft and Uber.

To access Libra on smartphone­s, users will go through a virtual wallet that will also be named Calibra.

While Facebook boasts an enormous customer base dotted across the globe that should facilitate Libra’s uptake, it firm also been plagued by privacy concerns that could make users hesitate.

“Can’t wait for a cryptocurr­ency with the ethics of Uber, the censorship resistance of Paypal and the centralisa­tion of Visa, all tied together under the proven privacy of Facebook,” said Sarah Jamie Lewis, head of non-profit research organisati­on Open Privacy.

Libra has meanwhile raised eyebrows among the world’s financial regulators, including the Bank of England, the European Central Bank and the US Federal Reserve.

But Disney believes that Libra will finally force regulators to present clear regulation guidelines, as demanded by the cryptocurr­ency community itself.

“We have been waiting for a long time for a clearer signal [regarding] the regulation of cryptocurr­encies and digital assets,” she said.

But James Bennett, head of cryptocurr­ency research firm Bitassist, argues that Libra should not be seen in the same light as Bitcoin.

“In the long run, people may realise that Libra is not a cryptocurr­ency,” Bennett said at the FinTech Week event.

“A true cryptocurr­ency should be resistant to attacks by all parties, from sovereign states to global corporatio­ns,” he said, adding that “cryptocurr­ency is a type of money used to transfer value over the internet that cannot be stopped, confiscate­d or destroyed by any single entity”.

Trump on Tuesday attacked virtual currencies, slamming them for their alleged shadowy nature and arguing that Libra had no standing nor dependabil­ity – unlike the dollar.

“I am not a fan of Bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies, which are not money, and whose value is highly volatile and based on thin air,” Trump tweeted.

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