
Facebook is preparing to launch its own cryptocurrency as soon as this month, according to The Information.
The company plans to hand over control of the currency system to outside backers as part of a move to reassure financial regulators, the report says. Facebook has reportedly been in discussions with dozens of financial institutions and tech companies that will oversee the new cryptocurrency and contribute capital to the program. The payment system would be free of transaction fees and is designed to be used all over the world, especially in developing nations, The Information reports.
The cryptocurrency tokens would be primarily used in Facebook's apps such as its main social network app and Messenger, but the company is reportedly working on ways for users to obtain the currency at ATM machines.The report comes after the BBC reported in May that Facebook is developing a payments system that would be ready to launch in multiple countries by the first quarter of next year. The company had reportedly met with several cryptocurrency exchanges, bank officials, and trading firms in preparation, that report said.
David Marcus, who Facebook initially hired from PayPal to lead its Messenger efforts in 2014, has been leading the company's blockchain efforts, as Vox reported last year.
The company will also reportedly offer employees working on the project the option to have their salary paid in cryptocurrency, The Information reports.
That Facebook is reportedly handing over control of its cryptocurrency to an outside foundation could be critical for the company to establish trust in its payments system as the company has been riddled with privacy scandals in recent years. It also marks another step for Facebook in its effort to expand beyond only serving as a social network, as it's gradually built its own app ecosystem through its Messenger app.