U.S. Libra Hearings Day 1: Lawmakers Finding It Hard to Trust Facebook

gepubliceerd op by Cointele | gepubliceerd op

The United States' Senate Banking Committee raised a wave skepticism over Facebook's crypto project Libra during the first day of testimony on July 16.

As day two is coming in the next few hours, Cointelegraph posts a short recap of yesterday's hearings.

The first day saw Senate Banking Committee attacked David Marcus, head of Facebook's crypto wallet Calibra, raising major concerns over Libra, including issues of trust, privacy, security and regulation.

The problem of trust has apparently prevailed during the hearing, as Senator Sherrod Brown considered Facebook "Dangerous" in the very opening remarks.

The senator further expressed his scepticism, expressing doubts that people will trust Facebook with "Their hard-earned money."

Elizabeth Warren, Senator and Democratic Presidential Candidate, outlined a lack of evidence that Facebook does not plan to link the platform's user data to their money transactions and keep those records.

Senator Martha McSally escalated Warren's concerns, pointing out that Facebook's "Track record of failing and violating and deceiving in the past" is a sufficient cause for the committee to not trust the platform at all.

Senate Banking Committee Chairman Mike Crapo raised a question why the Libra Corporation had chosen to register in Switzerland.

Specifically, Marcus emphasized Facebook's intention to be compliant with the U.S. Financial Crimes Enforcement Network in distributing its Libra stablecoin.

In the hearing, Marcus highlighted the role of Libra in the global leadership of the U.S. in an apparent attempt to mitigate the escalated concerns over the project.

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