Global remittance giant Western Union is reportedly working on a pilot program with distributed payment protocol provider Ripple Labs.
The news was first revealed in a tweet by Ripple Labs promoting CEO Chris Larsenâs appearance at Global Conference 2015, an annual event held by non-profit think tank the Milken Institute.
The pilot was further confirmed by Monica Long, VP of marketing and communications at Ripple Labs, who told CoinDesk that while Western Union is âexploring a pilot project using Rippleâ, no further details on the initiative were available.
Long did, however, suggest that Western Union was interested in Ripple due to its existing value propositions, stating:
âIn general, financial institutions and networks use Ripple as a technology that powers real-time settlement in any currency to lower the cost of liquidity and compliance.â
Representatives for Western Union did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Should such a project come to fruition, the partnership would seem to mark a transition for Western Union, which has traditionally been dismissive of the digital currency ecosystem.
First discussed in a 2013 conference, Western Union chief information officer (CIO) John âDavidâ Thompson would later tell CoinDesk that the company didnât believe the technology was ready for todayâs market.
The comments came as part of an interview that sought to frame the technology as novel, but perhaps too fraught with regulatory challenges for the companyâs consideration.
Still, Thompson did admit to having mined bitcoin and to an interest in the technologyâs future implications for Western Union. âThat doesnât mean that we arenât looking at it, how we enable [usage] legally, what licenses we need in addition to what we have,â he said at the time.
It remains to be seen whether the announcement marks a change from what Thompson characterized as the companyâs âwatch and learnâ approach.
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