Libra Association Renames Itself As Diem Association

Libra Association Renames Itself As Diem Association

By RTTNews Staff Writer | Published: 12/2/2020 9:19 AM ET

The Libra Association, a consortium of major financial partners for Facebook's Libra cryptocurrency project, has renamed itself as Diem Association. The name of the Libra Network has also been changed to Diem Network. The new logo has maintained the purple colour and fluid movement design, with 'diem' written in lower case.

The move comes six months after social media giant Facebook had renamed its Calibra cryptocurrency wallet as Novi cryptocurrency wallet in a bid to avoid confusion with the yet to be released Libra cryptocurrency. Novi is a new digital wallet for Facebook's Libra payment network.

Following the transitioning to the name "Diem", which denotes a new day for the project, the Diem Association said it will continue to pursue a mission of building a safe, secure and compliant payment system that empowers people and businesses around the world.

The Libra Association has been recently busy with the recruitment and appointment of key executives. Following the appointment of Stuart Levey as CEO in May, the Libra association went on a hiring spree, appointing Robert Werner as General Counsel, Sterling Daines as Chief Compliance Officer, Steve Bunnell as Chief Legal Officer, Ian Jenkins as chief financial officer, Dahlia Malkhi as Chief Technology Officer, and Christy Clark as Chief of Staff.

Additionally, the Libra Association also appointed James Emmett as Managing Director, Ian Jenkins as chief risk officer, and Saumya Bhavsar as General Counsel of the Libra Networks, which manages its cross-border payment systems.

Following the recruitment of key executives, the Diem Association is now prioritizing technological and operational readiness for launch. It is in constructive ongoing engagement with governments, regulators and other key stakeholders.

The Diem Association confirmed that it will proceed only upon receiving regulatory approval, including a payment systems license for the operational subsidiary of the Association from Swiss Financial Markets Supervisory Authority (FINMA).

The Association had initiated the payment system licensing process with FINMA in mid-April. The licensing process is ongoing and the operational subsidiary of the Association is in active and productive dialogue with FINMA.

Facebook had initially announced its planned global stablecoin Libra in June 2019. Just last week, the Libra Association reportedly announced that it is looking to roll out a dollar-pegged version of Libra in January 2021.

Geneva, Switzerland-based Libra Association was formed as an independent not-for-profit organization by the initial 28 financial backers of the Libra cryptocurrency project in June 2019. They were to invest around $10 million each in the project.

However, nearly 10 of the 28 initial members, including most of the payment firms, backtracked as they did not want to be publicly seen to be backing the project, fearing regulatory scrutiny. Some member added on later to now make it 27 members.

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Article written by an RTT News Staff Writer, and posted on the RTT News.com website.

Article reposted on Markethive by Jeffrey Sloe

Shopify Joins Libra Association

Shopify Joins Libra Association

By RTTNews Staff Writer | Published: 2/24/2020 9:25 AM ET

Amid a slew of major companies abandoning the association, Canadian e-commerce giant Shopify has joined the Libra Association, a consortium of major financial partners of Facebook’s Libra cryptocurrency project. Shopify will now become the 21st member of the association.

Shopify intends to build a payment network that makes money easier to access and supports its more than one million merchants and global consumers of the platform.

It wants to create an infrastructure that advocates transparent fees and easy access to capital, and ensure the security and privacy of its merchants’ customer data.

The Libra Association was formed as an independent not-for-profit organization by the initial 28 financial backers of the Libra cryptocurrency project in June 2019 to oversee the cryptocurrency’s creation and eventual consumer roll-out. These 28 companies were to invest around $10 million each in the consortium to fund the development of the stablecoin.

However, seven of the 28 initial members, including most of the payment firms, backtracked as they did not want to be publicly seen to be backing the project, fearing regulatory scrutiny.

The companies who withdrew support for the project include Visa, MasterCard, PayPal, Stripe, eBay, and Booking Holdings. PayU was the only payments firm left in the association. Telecom giant Vodafone became the eighth firm to pull out of the Libra Association last month.

The member organizations who have already signed onto the Libra Association charter include Coinbase, Lyft, Spotify, PayU, Xapo, Anchorage, Kiva Microfunds, Andreessen Horowitz, Uber and Calibra, which is a Facebook subsidiary formed to run the Libra network, powered by blockchain technology.

The Libra project has been raising many serious concerns regarding privacy, money laundering, consumer protection and financial stability. Apart from being subject to significant regulatory and political scrutiny in the U.S., France and Germany also have recently pledged to block Libra from operating in Europe.

The news about Facebook’s planned cryptocurrency had come in early March 2019. In May, there were also reports about the social media giant’s plan to launch the cryptocurrency-based payments in many countries by the first quarter of 2020. Facebook then confirmed in June its plans to launch cryptocurrency Libra in 2020.

For comments and feedback contact: editorial@rttnews.com

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Article written by an RTT News Staff Writer, and posted on the RTT News.com website.

Article reposted on Markethive by Jeffrey Sloe