Although Libra hasnât yet officially launched, pundits, politicians, and developers are already weighing in with warnings, celebrations, and memes.
US representatives from both sides of the aisle have already chimed in.
âFacebook is already too big and too powerful, and it has used that power to exploit usersâ data without protecting their privacy,â Representative Sherrod Brown, the leading Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee, tweeted out. âWe cannot allow Facebook to run a risky new cryptocurrency out of a Swiss bank account without oversight.â
Maxine Waters, House Financial Services Committee Chairwoman, also expressed concerns. Even asking Facebook to stop the project until Congress can understand it further. She is joined by Republican Senator Patrick McHenry.
Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) told Yahoo Finance it sounds like Facebook is âexpanding their monopolyâ with its new cryptocurrency project.
âWe need to see exactly what their specific proposals are, but Iâm very concerned about Facebookâs behavior on a range of fronts. Iâm concerned about their size, Iâm concerned about their anti-competitive conduct, Iâm concerned about their rampant violations of privacy,â Hawley said.
He even called for an investigation into breaking up the social media giant.
âThere needs to be an antitrust investigation. I hope one will go forward, but in the meantime, in the immediate future with this consent decree â if itâs just a fine of a few billion dollars, thatâs a speeding ticket to Facebook. They need to get serious,â he said. âName Mark Zuckerberg. Name him, if he has in fact participated in violating consent decree as reports indicate. And letâs consider some tougher penalties, too.â
âI donât trust Facebook with anything,â he said.
âFacebookâs new Libra blockchain project has the potential to be a big step forward towards a more global and inclusive financial infrastructure,â said U.S. Congressman Darren Soto, Co-Chair of the Congressional Blockchain Caucus. âWe are encouraged by the possibility of increasing access to mobile and digital payments, which will ultimately benefit our society and become a driver of economic growth. While it is yet unclear how this new technology will be regulated, it is crucial Congress continues to protect consumers and the financial well-being of investors, while simultaneously promoting innovation for these virtual currencies.â
âIn the Congressional Blockchain Caucus we are working in a bipartisan manner to educate and maximize Blockchain technologiesâ potential for the U.S. economy. We applaud the thoughtfulness behind the Libra Association. If efforts to achieve this multi-level cryptocurrency coordination is successful â one that protects consumers and prioritizes user privacy â this could be a significant advancement for the 21st Century economy,â he said.
On the private side of things, pundit Jim Cramer was ecstatic.
âThe disenfranchised will welcome Mark Zuckerberg as a savior, â he said on CNBCâs âSquawk on the Street.â He sees it as a solution to the underbanked in American cities where âcheck cashing placesâ are the closest consumers can get to money services.
Bankers and startup founders see Libraâs success as inevitable.
âTheyâre not the first company to launch a crypto payment solution, but they do have immense reach obviously through their Facebook platform,â said NABâs business banking chief Anthony Healy. âWith a billion plus users on its platform, it is clearly a threat.â
âIf itâs successful, itâs not just going to have the traditional qualities of a corporate currency like Westfield dollars or, Qantas Frequent Flyer points, itâs really a governance play,â said Asher Tan, founder of CoinJar.
âLike all fintech disrupters, theyâre all potential threats, but theyâre also opportunities for us to learn, and if some of these emerge as real threats we can learn from them, develop our own capabilities and respond appropriately.â
Crypto grandfather Erik Vorhees is obviously excited about the move.
âZoom out for a second and realise how far this industry has come,â he tweeted. âThe biggest companies in the world are now launching cryptocurrencies. BOOM.â
1/ Thoughts on Libra (and my first tweetstorm!): first, zoom out for a second and realize how far this industry has come. The biggest companies in the world are now launching cryptocurrencies. BOOM.
â Erik Voorhees (@ErikVoorhees) June 18, 2019
Spencer Chen of BRD Wallet, thinks crypto people should stop âshittingâ on Libra.
Don't get why the crypto community shitting on Facebook and Libra. It's probably the mainstream kickstart + broad adoption blockchain needs.
You ever see any pure plays get this kind of groundswell? -> https://t.co/ErRcAhwCzf
â Spencer Chen (@spencerchen) June 18, 2019
Jerry Brito, executive director over at the research non-profit CoinCenter, raised important questions about the future of Libra:
âOf course, there must be more to joining the Investment Token club than merely meeting the outlined requirements (seems like Huawei and Gazprombank might qualify), though itâs not clear to me if itâs a majority vote of the membership or what.â
Changpeng Zhao, CEO of the cryptocurrency exchange Binance, wrote that Facebook has a chance to âreshape the payment industryâ and start the âun-dollarisation of the world.â
âFacebookâs initiative, with the Libra cryptocurrency at the center of the project, will have a significant impact on the financial industry and global economies from both a medium and long-term perspective,â he wrote. âBacked by a basket of fiat currency-denominated assets in its initial release, Libra represents a first attempt at creating a world currency, on-chain or not, with everyday usage by billions of individuals and institutions across the globe.â
Europe, on the other hand, is calling for far more scrutiny.
âAs a reminder, the principle of e-money in Europe is that a customer credits an e-money account usually from a bank account or a credit card (or more recently from cash-in / cash-out points at partner merchants). This e-money account is opened in the books of an e-money institution and customers can use this e-money to make online payments to merchants who accept it (for example very few today do not accept PayPal). The difference with Facebookâs Libra is almost solely that Libra will be indexed to a basket of currencies rather than being representative of a single currency,â said Emilien Bernard-Alzias of legal firm Simmons & Simmons LLP. âTherefore, Libra project is not significantly revolutionizing the financial market in Europe and does not really challenge the European Central Bank (ECB). As announced in the Libraâs white paper, this project is much more game changing for people having poor access to banking services over the world.â
âThe proposed launch of a digital coin (cryptocurrency) by Facebook will require careful scrutiny from several enforcement bodies, including data protection authorities,â said European Data Protection Supervisor Giovanni Buttarelli.
Bruno Le Maire already called upon the Group of Seven central bank governors to prepare a report on Facebookâs project for the upcoming July meetings. Expressing a latent anxiety about the disruption of national currencies for the Euro, he said:
âIt is out of questionâ that Libra âbecome a sovereign currency⦠It canât and it must not happen.â
Markus Ferber, a German member of the European Parliament, was also concerned about Facebookâs supranational spread, adding to the conversation that with more than 2 billion users the tech-giant could become a âshadow bank.â
âMultinational corporations such as Facebook must not be allowed to operate in a regulatory nirvana when introducing virtual currencies,â he said, sounding the alarm for regulators.
âIt is no surprise that Facebook Inc.âs ambitious plan to roll out its own cryptocurrency â Project Libra ran into immediate political opposition in Europe, with calls for tighter regulation of the social-media giant,â reflected Robin Matze, Blockchain Lawyer and Advisor to the German Government.
âAML (Anti Money Laundering) laws usually take a risk-based approach. Therefore, Facebook would have to take reasonable measures in order to mitigate that risk.â Matze offered a potential solution to this nebula of risk and regulations, though it may not be what Facebook wants to hear⦠âThe easiest way to be compliant to various jurisdiction is â a fortiori â to apply the strictest regime. This approach is definitely not the cheapest for each jurisdiction but the easiest to manage on a global level.â
On the other hand, TransferWise, a London-based fintech firm focused on money transfers and cross-border payments, thinks Facebookâs global reach works in its favor. The companyâs CTO Harsh Sinha said âlarge companies with large resourcesâ can help facilitate conversations with regulators.
âThe reality is that there is quite a bit of regulatory work that goes into putting up a global network of payments but maybe thereâs a way to bypass that,â he told CNBC.
Bank of England Governor Mark Carney also appeared more optimistic about the project.
âAnything that works in this world will become instantly systemic and will have to be subject to the highest standards of regulations,â the central banker said Tuesday.
In the end, however, the joksters came through with the last word.
No one will call it #Libra.
Everyone is going to call them Zucks. Gimme 50 â¤ucks.
â Bruno Skvorc (@bitfalls) June 18, 2019
Take that worldâ¦..#btc #Libra pic.twitter.com/UpoQdBtTBX
â s1lverbox (@cryptochangex) June 19, 2019
Crypto traders when the US government and Facebook start fighting over Libra pic.twitter.com/iCzgdSNBVh
â Moon Overlord (@MoonOverlord) June 19, 2019
LIVE: $Libra launch #Libra â pic.twitter.com/B6pzCgIUSm
â ®â¿TCÉ¢Êɪɴᴠá´Ê⢠(@grinder_o) June 19, 2019
Meet the inventor of Libra pic.twitter.com/4Yudy5IkP7
â faast (@goFaast) June 19, 2019
Image via Shutterstock.