With \'Libra\,\' Facebook takes on the world of cryptocurrency

With 'Libra,' Facebook takes on the world of cryptocurrency

AFP  |  San Francisco 

is leaping into the world of cryptocurrency with its own digital money, designed to let people save, send or spend as easily as firing off text messages.

and some two dozen partners released a prototype of as an open source code to be used by developers interested in weaving it into apps, services or businesses ahead of a rollout as global digital next year.

An eponymous nonprofit association based in will oversee the blockchain-based Libra, maintaining a real-world asset reserve to keep its value stable.

The initiative has the potential to allow more than a billion "unbanked" people around the world access to and financial services, said Association

"We believe if you give people access to money and opportunity at the lowest cost, the way the internet itself did in the past with information, you can create a lot more stability than we have had up until now," Disparte told AFP.

Association debuted with 28 members including Mastercard, Visa, Stripe, Kiva, PayPal, Lyft, and Women's World

"Sending money to your friend shouldn't be harder than getting them an ride home," said and risk

"Libra has the potential to bridge the gap between traditional and new technology, while reducing the costs for everyone."

will be just one voice among many in the association, but is separately building a digital wallet called

"We view this as a complement to to connect people wherever they are; that includes allowing them to exchange value," told AFP.

"Many people who use Facebook are in countries where there are barriers to or credit." is being built into Facebook's and WhatsApp with a goal of letting users send Libra as easily as they might fire off a text message.

Libra learned from the many other that have preceded it such as and is designed to avoid the roller-coaster valuations that have attracted speculation and caused ruin.

Real-world currency used to buy Libra will go into a reserve backing the digital money, the value of which will mirror stable currencies such as the and the euro, according to its creators.

"It is backed by a reserve of assets that ensures utility and low volatility," Tomer said.

For the to operate on a global scale, Libra is relying on a platform of that uses about 100 trusted computer "nodes" to validate and register transactions.

The will be the only entity able to "mint or burn" the digital currency, maintaining supply in tune with demand and assets in reserve, according to Barel.

"It is not about trusting Facebook, it is effectively trust in the association's founding organizations that this is independent and democratic," Disparte said.

The launch comes with Facebook seeking to move past a series of lapses on privacy and data protection which have tarnished its image and spark scrutiny from regulators around the world.

has promised a new direction for Facebook built around smaller groups, private messaging and payments.

The new Calibra digital wallet promises to eventually give Facebook opportunities to build into its offerings, offer expand its own commerce and let more small businesses buy ads at the

"We certainly see long-term value for Facebook," Barel said.

Financial information at Calibra will be kept strictly separate from social data at Facebook and won't be used to target ads, said.

Libra will be a regulated currency, subject to local laws in markets regarding fraud, guarding against money laundering and more, according to Weil.

"If you look at the state of people using money to do bad things, most of it happens in cash," Weil said.

For people without access to banks, local money could be swapped for Libra at traditional currency exchange houses or businesses offering such services.

And the ubiquity of means digital wallets for Libra could make and and available in places where they don't now exist.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, June 18 2019. 19:45 IST