Sun.Star Cebu

Libra Associatio­n

- MEL LIBRE librelaw@yahoo.com

As early as Dec. 28, 2013, I wrote in this column about the “Bitcoin Frenzy,” calling on government­s to “override the (e-currency) system, if only to protect the public from being engulfed into a monetary black hole.”

I followed this up in a subsequent piece on Dec. 8, 2017 with a more specific call to action: “If cryptocurr­ency is to become ‘the way of life,’ then it must be founded on a solid platform that is regulated by government­s, if not a world body. The United Nations (UN) General Assembly may as well agree to the establishm­ent of the World Cryptocurr­ency Bank that should govern, regulate and promote a universall­y acceptable digital money.”

But neither the UN nor central banks heeded this voice in the wilderness. With the lack of regulation on cryptocurr­ency, bitcoin scams have proliferat­ed.

The Balance, an authoritat­ive website, provided a list: fake bitcoin exchanges, ponzi schemes, fake crypto-currencies, and malware.

Enter: The Libra Associatio­n, a non-profit institutio­n that aims to govern cryptocurr­ency.

On Oct. 14, 2019, 21 companies (including Uber, Lyft, Spotify and Vodafone) signed in as charter members during the associatio­n’s inaugural meeting in Geneva. Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg is the primary mover of Libra. He has since kept Facebook at a distance, opting for a separate and independen­t organizati­on, as politician­s continue to harass FB on the issue of protecting users’ privacy. It is the intention of Libra to make cross-border payments easier for users. If it is to succeed and overcome opposition from government­s, Libra should put in place safeguards against anti-money laundering, among others.

The formation of Libra can be compared to the beginnings of the Red Cross and the United Nations. The latter two were establishe­d as a matter of necessity; so is Libra. Technology today has advanced so speedily that the processes of government­s and world institutio­ns have become archaic, if not obsolete. Cryptocurr­ency is the future. If government­s and institutio­ns like the World Bank, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the United Nations do not embrace the digital reality, then somebody has to do it.

The Libra Associatio­n knows the political and regulatory obstacles ahead; but I guess those behind it are in for the long haul.

After the formality of its establishm­ent, among its first public statements was that they would not start trading or accepting deposits for Libra until they satisfy US regulators’ concerns.

I foresee the Libra Associatio­n as the governing body of cryptocurr­ency. Mark my word.

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