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Meta's Ill-Fated Cryptocurrency May Be Close To Dissolving 39

Diem, Meta's ill-fated cryptocurrency previously known as Libra, may never actually materialize. According to Bloomberg, the Diem Association is reportedly "weighing a sale of its assets as a way to return capital to its investor members." Engadget reports: It's unclear what assets the Diem Association owns, but the report notes the group is talking to bankers about selling its intellectual property and finding "a new home for the engineers that developed the technology." If a sale were to happen, it would seem to be the final nail in the coffin for Diem, the cryptocurrency project that Mark Zuckerberg has championed. Plans to get the stablecoin off the ground have stalled for years amid regulatory pushback and lawmaker concerns. After first launching as Libra, several high-profile partners pulled out in 2019.

Last fall, Facebook started a small pilot of Novi, the cryptocurrency wallet formerly known as Calibra. But the fact that Novi was forced to launch without support for Diem -- it used a different stablecoin called the Pax Dollar -- was a sign that Diem's future remained uncertain. Longtime Facebook exec David Marcus, who oversaw the social network's crypto plans, said at the time that Facebook remained committed to Diem. "I do want to be clear that our support for Diem hasn't changed and we intend to launch Novi with Diem once it receives regulatory approval and goes live," he wrote. Marcus announced a month later that he was leaving Facebook.
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Meta's Ill-Fated Cryptocurrency May Be Close To Dissolving

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  • Who knew.... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by azcoyote ( 1101073 ) on Wednesday January 26, 2022 @06:02AM (#62208575)
    ...that the cryto bubble would eventually pop? /sarcasm
    • Crypto bubble wasn't really relevant to Diem, they weren't trying to get people to buy it as a speculative investment. At most they could have made some money investing the reserve in short term securities.

      • In Europe, the money has to be held in a ringfenced bank account, and interest rates are basically 0%. So the business model would be much the same as Paypal, they make the money from transaction fees.

      • Good point. IMO, the appeal of stablecoins, like anything else related to blockchains, is built upon the cultural allure of cryptocurrency, which has bubbled alongside the exchange value of specific currencies such as Bitcoin. It looks to me--from my limited knowledge of the situation--that Diem is "popping" not because it had an exaggerated exchange value itself, but rather because the exaggerated cultural value of cryptocurrency could not sustain it for long. Right or wrong, investors will jump ship when
    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      Crypto is weird, in that it's a bubble that keeps blowing up and bursting every year. Yes, most of the cryptocurrencies dropped in value by about 50% recently. That said, they did the same thing last year and recovered their losses within 3 months.

      • Quite true. Doomsayers like myself tend to believe that at some point there will be one big burst to rule them all, but admittedly one can hardly be sure that this recent decline represents anything more than a temporary setback. Because of the volatility of crypto markets, such dramatic swings in value can occur rapidly and then be completely undone almost as rapidly. Volatility is in my view a symptom of a future collapse, but such volatility is not in itself that collapse.
  • arrest Zuckerberg - I'm such there's lots of securities violations in there somewhere
  • by evanism ( 600676 ) on Wednesday January 26, 2022 @06:16AM (#62208599) Journal

    "Assets"

    I like this. Even a drowning vapourware crypto has... "assets" to flog off.

  • by jonbryce ( 703250 ) on Wednesday January 26, 2022 @06:30AM (#62208625) Homepage

    I guess they are trying to replicate the success of WeChat pay, but they did it without blockchains, and Paypal already has that market sewn up in the West.

  • Nobody wants ZuckBux.

  • This idea was entirely copied from a smaller company that went under, like most of their "ideas."
  • That'll learn 'em. Well, probably not, but.

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