What You Should Know About the Facebook Blockchain Project

in #facebook5 years ago (edited)

If you have seen the film "The Social Network," which is based on a book about the foundational days of Facebook, you probably remember Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, the Harvard twins whose early investment in the company would later make them billionaire Bitcoin investors. Like other Facebook co-founders and early investors, the Winklevoss twins had a nasty fallout with CEO Mark Zuckerberg, but they may be teaming up with him again in a cryptocurrency project.

Meet GlobalCoin, Facebook's Blockchain Token

Facebook is seriously considering launching GlobalCoin, a monetary blockchain token pegged to the relative values of major currencies. The focus of GlobalCoin will be online retail payments and electronic money transfers for Facebook users; at one point, Zuckerberg was mostly interested in wire transfers and remittances via WhatsApp, but the prospect of two million Facebook users making online purchases is too tempting to ignore.

Zuckerberg has reached out to the Winklevoss twins for help with the GlobalCoin project. It should be noted that the twins are the founders of the Gemini cryptocurrency exchange, which handles the Gemini token, one of the first digital currencies pegged to the value of the United States dollar. Similar to the Gemini token, Facebook's GlobalCoin will also be a stablecoin, but it will be pegged to a basket of currencies.

How Investors Prepare for Facebook's Integration of Cryptocurrency

The Facebook CEO has also met with officials from the Bank of England and also from the U.S. Treasury Department. He is seeking involvement from MasterCard, Visa and Western Union; furthermore, he has also estimated that the project could require about an investment of about a billion dollars. What makes GlobalCoin interesting, aside from being a stablecoin that tracks the value of more than one fiat currency, is that it has a great potential for adoption and circulation in the vast Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp user base. Even if Zuckerberg is not able to secure this funding, he could tap into the company's cash reserves.

Some cryptocurrency analysts have observed that GlobalCoin will not be similar to Bitcoin because Facebook will exert control over it, but not being decentralized has not been a problem for tokens such as Ripple, which has been able to achieve circulation and adoption milestones thanks to the work of a dedicated business development team. It is not known at this time whether this token will offer a mining option, but it is unlikely that it will. The tentative launch of GlobalCoin could take place early next year.

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Dear @cryptocoingrowth

Discussions regarding Libra and Facebook are very intense lately and I personally don't know yet what to think about it.

I'm mostly interested how FED and other central banks will react if they will realize that Libra is a threat for current financial system.

Personally I will not put my trust in Facebook and I don't think I will ever use Libra. However I will surely pay attention to this project as it may turn our financial world up-side-down....

Important question I would like to ask you, and hopefully you would share your own opinion:

  • many people out there seem to see Libra as a threat to current monetary system. I'm one of those. However I've learned that global economy is build on debt. And all debts are in FIAT currency. So does it really matter if people use Libra to pay for their "groceries" and shop online? They still need to pay all their debts and mortgages for next 20-30 years in their local fiat currency.

For that reason alone I cannot see monetary system being changed much. Neither by libra or bitcoin or any other crypto. Debts, goverment expenses, trade oil - all of it will still require $$$.

What do you think? Upvote on the way.

Yours,
Piotr

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