Simon Morris, the head of product at the Libra Association, has left the project within five months of joining, according to his LinkedIn profile accessed on Oct. 9.
The Switzerland-registered Libra Association is a not-for-profit membership organization established to govern the network for Facebook's planned stablecoin Libra.
A BitTorrent veteran and fleeting Libra contributor.
Morris's LinkedIn page indicates that he left the Association in August - roughly two months after the social media giant announced its Libra plans.
Prior to his work on Libra, Morris was a BitTorrent veteran, working there for almost 9 years across multiple roles until 2016, followed by a second stint in 2017-18 to oversee the design and development of a cryptocurrency project to be integrated into the BitTorrent protocol.
"The work led directly to acquisition discussions which culminated in the acquisition of BitTorrent by TRON in May 2018. The crypto project lives on and is being brought to market under the name 'Project Atlas.'".
On Oct. 4, PayPal, one of the Association's major backers, pulled out of participation altogether citing worries that its own reputation might suffer.
"We remain supportive of Libra's aspirations and look forward to continued dialogue on ways to work together in the future," a PayPal representative told Cointelegraph at the time.
On Oct. 2, reports surfaced that fellow Association members Visa, Mastercard and Stripe were also reevaluating their participation, similarly citing reputation concerns as well as Facebook's allegedly exaggerated claims of regulators' acceptance.
Libra has notably faced a major backlash from regulators worldwide since its unveiling in June.
Libra Association's Head of Product Spent Just Five Months in the Role
gepubliceerd op Oct 9, 2019
by Cointele | gepubliceerd op Coinage
Coinage
Recent nieuws
Alles zien
Blockchain Bites: Bitcoin's Run, Uniswap's Hemorrhaging Value, Anchorage's Banking Bid
Bitcoin is nearing all-time highs in price and market cap last set three years ago.
Japan's megabanks to lead experiment with digital yen
We have, in order, Cheese Bank with a $3.3 million theft, Akropolis with its $2 million loss, Value DeFi with a whopping $6 million exploit and finally Origin Protocol's loss of $7 million.
Number of new Bitcoin addresses spikes amid growing FOMO
Japan's three largest banks, as part of a group of 30 private sector actors, are set to collaborate on an experiment with a digital yen.
Not just Wall Street: Quant trader explains why Bitcoin price is going up
Sam Trabucco, a quantitative trader at Alameda Research, believes four general factors are pushing up the price of Bitcoin.