Facebook Plans To Create Its Own Cryptocurrency: Report (cheddar.com) 90
Facebook is "very serious" about launching its own cryptocurrency, news outlet Cheddar reported Friday. It's not the first time the idea of a Facebook coin has been floated, but it seems more apparent now in wake of Facebook's reshuffled executive structure and newly formed blockchain group. From the report: Facebook started studying blockchain almost a year ago, when a member of its corporate development team, Morgan Beller, began looking at how the social platform could use the emerging technology. At the time, Beller was the only Facebook employee devoted to studying blockchain, the digital and decentralized ledger that underpins cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum. Her work was thrust into the spotlight this week when Facebook announced that the vice president in charge of the Messenger app, David Marcus, would lead a new team to "explore how to best leverage blockchain across Facebook, starting from scratch."
In the words of Michael Scott (Score:5, Funny)
the Mark of Desperation (Score:2)
not going to fall for the Zucker, or AngryCoin, or whatever bilious nonsense scheme they are into here. all cryptocurrency is a scam, existing only to buy crap on the darknet. I don't intend to friend Tor, either.
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not going to fall for the Zucker, or AngryCoin, or whatever bilious nonsense scheme they are into here. all cryptocurrency is a scam, existing only to buy crap on the darknet. I don't intend to friend Tor, either.
sigh... you do know that all transactions in bitcoin ( and most other crypto) are open and everyone can see everything right? (Posted again after logging in)
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Well I leveled up to master last week but i'm waiting on my friend to get a few more crypto XP so we can start crafting crypto. Do you know how much gold they're selling for in the auction house these days?
Crumbling Facebook ? So what ? (Score:2)
Yeah, and once Facebook crumbles : where are you going to run to ?
Instagram ?
WhatsApp ?
At most, Mark is going to say "meh", and make a mental note to make another attempt at buying Snap, to be ready for the up-coming next crumbling after the facebook's one.
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Yeah, and once Facebook crumbles : where are you going to run to ?
I'll do the same thing I'm doing right now: sitting back with a beer and some popcorn, watching all the fools who participate in so-called 'social media' make worse fools of themselves, flitting here and there like dry leaves in the wind to whatever the next 'social media sensation' is. So they can be exploited some more, getting nothing of value in return. It's great entertainment in a schadenfreude sort of way, but also very, very sad.
Social networks (Score:2)
What did we do before facebook?
A significant part was doing MySpace.
Why do we have to run to anything?
Mostly because of FOMO.
What the what? (Score:1)
There's something wrong with a species (Score:1, Troll)
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They're even easier for central bodies to manipulate to the detriment of the working class.
Currencies are not manipulated to the detriment of the working class. Lower classes tend to be debtors while upper classes tend to be creditors. Debtors benefit from inflation, while creditors benefit from deflation. Nearly all governments are debtors, and they also benefit from inflation. Most governments and central banks have inflation policies of at least a few percent. The Federal Reserve's QE programs were strongly opposed by "Country Club Republicans", and I doubt if their concerns were the welf
True (Score:2)
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How many of these "cheerleaders" are working class? Just because an argument is made, doesn't mean it is a valid argument.
America's currency was deflationary from the end of the Civil War until the outbreak of WW1. This was the "Gilded Age", as wealth became concentrated. Most of the 20th Century was inflationary, with a dip into deflation during the Great Depression of the 1930s. The working class mostly prospered, home ownership soared, and we had far more economic equality.
It is best to have a stable
Re:There's something wrong with a species (Score:5, Insightful)
who exerts this much effort and energy (literally, it's a ton of electricity)
Who says it's going to be proof of work? Maybe it will be a proof of stake coin. There are already other proof of stake coins out there that work.
If you cut the work needed (Score:3)
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No, this cryptocurrency is used to purchase Zynga credits, or whatever is the P2W thing de jour.
Zuckerberg must want to be King of Facebookland (Score:3)
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Black Mirror ... "98% match making" ... Not too far off
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WE WUZ MIRRORS 'N SHIEEET!
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What could possibly go wrong? (Score:5, Insightful)
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at this point about the only thing that would make them even more evil is if they somehow positioned themselves as the gatekeeper for online voting. (i'm sure they've tried.)
The real news (Score:5, Funny)
The real news here is that Facebook has a female employee whose work is valued by upper management.
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Everyone at Facebook has vast experience with imaginary value.
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Also, I like how everyone is assuming the initial researcher is female based on a single 'Her' pronoun, it could very well be a typo - maybe its a dude like Morgan Freeman
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Sign of Facebook getting too big (Score:1)
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Which is what this story basically is, an attempt at a Facebook share price pump up, after much bad news. Of course Facebook do a ponzi crypto currency and although the potential is there for Facebook to specifically target their users that are the most vulnerable to that kind of manipulation and what hooks and triggers to mist effectively use against them, problem is pressure to ban unbacked crypto would become immediately immense, do to the manipulative nature of Facebooks gambit, targeting the gullible p
Decentralized Database (Score:2)
Monetizing Users (Score:4, Interesting)
"Your friend sent you a message. To read it, please mine 0.05 FBCoin."
I'm giving them too much credit, they won't even ask...
Facebook's business model is selling you out (Score:3)
But you can totally trust them to handle your money, right?
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It would presumably be a way to monetize their service, although why anyone would want to trade Zuckerbucks for USD is beyond me.
No plans to integrate the coins with their apps (Score:3)
Marcus said Facebook didn’t have plans to integrate cryptocurrency into its apps anytime soon.
What ? That seems to be only logical use case for them, and they're not doing it ? Makes no sense.
"Payments using crypto right now is just very expensive, super slow, so the various communities running the different blockchains and the different assets need to fix all the issues, and then when we get there someday, maybe we'll do something,” Marcus said.
That's stupid too. Facebook can slash transaction costs by keeping them off-chain, just moving virtual balances from one account to the other, and then only occasionally settle on-chain.
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They're going all in (Score:2)
Facebook is not content with spying on your behavior on their web site, your mobile device, and "partner" web sites. Now they want your lifetime purchase history---in full or in part, whatever they can get.
Hell no.
This is pretty ballsy, especially after the way they flailed around publicly in response to the Cambridge Analytica fiasco.
I've got three words: Fuck the Zuck.
Stock pumping (Score:2)
It actually makes a good deal of sense (Score:2)
Concerns about Facebook taking over the world aside, this makes some sense.
The biggest problem any virtual currency has is the onboarding problem -- how do you get people to actually start using your currency, and to assign any non-zero value to it?
Facebook already has millions (billions?) of users "onboard" so it has a big head start in that area, which it could use to its advantage.
My hope is that Facebook doesn't just try to create "yet another virtual currency", however; that's been done to death alread
A sure thing. (Score:2)
Paypal doesn't need one and neither does Facebook (Score:3)
Facebook has no more use for a cryptocurrency than PayPal ever has. The currency is controlled by a single entity so there's no trust problem to solve, and therefore no potential gain from the immense amount of resources that would need to be expended to run a blockchain (storage at best, and also heaps of processing power at worst). The relatively glacial pace of blockchain transactions would also be for naught.
If Facebook were just using cryptocurrency buzzwords to generate hype around yet another plain-jane online payment system, that would actually make a lot more sense.
Comment removed (Score:3)
Blockchain is different from Cryptocurrency (Score:2)
The headline is misleading. It sounds like Facebook actually wants to leverage blockchain technologies to accomplish tasks, and provide value/security for their services. That is distinct from a "cryptocurrency." The latter makes use of a distributed ledger (typically a blockchain, more in a second) to create a medium of exchange. This medium of exchange is essentially a commodity, like gold (difficult to acquire, with a limited supply), which is traded to settle debts (i.e. buy stuff), a function typically
Why? (Score:2)
There's already plenty of crypto-currencies out there, some are even targeted toward social networks usage such as Reddcoin.
There is no "coin" (Score:3)
Name (Score:2)
Cryptocurrency mention in TFA is clickbait (Score:2)
Companies are trying to leverage the decentralization of blockchain tech for stuff that is unrelated to mining - cf. https://cointelegraph.com/news/walmart-is-ready-to-use-blockchain-for-its-live-food-business . Facebook is probably looking to do so as well, maybe something like use blockchain voting to evaluate its news articles and sift thru the fakes better
There doesn't seem much point to them jumping into actual crypto mining, unless there is some new tie-up with nVidia