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Zuckerberg’s dream of launching a cryptocurrency is officially over

Zuckerberg’s dream of launching a cryptocurrency is officially over

After multiple rebrands, congressional hearings, and several high-profile staff departures, the Meta-backed cryptocurrency known as Diem is calling it quits.

The association behind Diem confirmed Monday that it sold its assets for around $200 million to Silvergate, a crypto-focused bank it was working with last year to launch a stablecoin pegged to the U.S. dollar. The decision to sell was made after it “became clear from our dialogue with federal regulators that the project could not move ahead,” Diem CEO Stuart Levey said in a press release. (It’s already known that the U.S. Federal Reserve was a key opponent to Diem launching.)

The sale of Diem’s assets marks the end of an effort that, in retrospect, was doomed from the start. Facebook, which now goes by Meta, created the apps that would have been the main way people used the token. So even though Facebook formed the Libra Association to govern the token with other companies, people were immediately fearful that Libra would make the controversial tech giant even more powerful. Plus, members of the Libra Association started to drop out, just months after the group had been announced.

Libra also burst onto the scene when stablecoins, which are designed to hold a set price to encourage regular transactions, were a relatively new idea and not closely scrutinized by regulators. Given how big the stablecoin market has become since 2019, governments around the world are starting to take notice and look at legislation. In November, the US Treasury said it thought stablecoins should be regulated as banks. And Barron’s recently reported that the White House is planning to direct federal agencies to regulate cryptocurrencies as a matter of national security.

While Meta’s ties to Diem are over, there’s always the chance that Silvergate or another player revives the project. Even though Meta’s reputation ultimately sank it, the design of Diem was more transparent and regulator-friendly than a lot of existing stablecoins. But with nearly all of Libra founding team gone from Meta, the odds of Diem ever reemerging with the same level of backing it once had feel slim.

It’s clear that at least some of the original leaders of Libra feel burned by how the project was politicized. David Marcus, the former Facebook executive who created Libra and left late last year, tweeted the following about Diem shutting down:

A silver lining to Diem’s demise is that Meta has promised to not enforce its trove of cryptocurrency patents against other crypto developers — something that even Jack Dorsey thinks is a good idea.

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