As 2019 fades, it’s fascinating to realize that one of the biggest stories in the payments industry came from a company traditionally outside of it – Facebook.
In June, the social media giant formally announced its new digital currency, Libra, with a stated mission to make online digital payments more efficient and provide financial access to unbanked populations.
This news was followed by a white paper and a subsequent announcement regarding the formation of the initial Libra Association partners. At the time, the consortium included the likes of Visa, Uber and Andreessen Horowitz (though Visa and others, like PayPal
Shortly after the announcement, things got interesting as David Marcus, Libra board member and leader of new Facebook subsidiary Calibra (a wallet for the Libra currency), testified on Capitol Hill in July and Mark Zuckerberg followed in October where he publicly claimed that Libra was not a threat to national security, nor would it facilitate money laundering or endanger users’ assets.
But even as Libra development
Would the arrival of Libra even matter in the long run? I ask this because the problem Facebook has been trying to solve has already been resolved by bitcoin more than 10 years ago – and in a way which acts as a commodity (data) and triggers fewer regulatory problems.
There already exists a fast, low-cost, frictionless electronic cash system that was designed for global payments. It is bitcoin’s original design, now reintroduced as