Business Exclusive: Meta in talks to deploy stablecoins three years after giving up on landmark crypto project

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In 2019, Meta announced an audacious project: a new cryptocurrency that could be used across Facebook, WhatsApp, and a host of other digital platforms. The company, though, pulled the plug on its plans in the face of withering opposition from Congress and other lawmakers. Now, Meta is testing the crypto waters again. According to five sources familiar with the matter, the company is in discussions with crypto firms to introduce stablecoins as a means to manage payouts, and has also hired a vice president of product with crypto experience to help shepherd the discussions. All five sources, whose identities are known to Fortune, spoke on the condition of anonymity to talk about private business dealings.


Meta declined to comment.

Stablecoins, a form of nonvolatile cryptocurrency typically pegged to the U.S. dollar, have long been a buzzy product in the blockchain industry, but the Biden administration’s vigorous anti-crypto policies limited their mainstream adoption. Donald Trump’s election last November, however, along with the recent $1.1 billion acquisition of the stablecoin startup Bridge by payment giant Stripe, have spurred their use in the broader financial world, especially as a form of cross-border payments.


In the past month, Visa announced a partnership with the stablecoin infrastructure provider Bridge; the financial firm Fidelity revealed it is developing its own stablecoin; and Stripe unveiled new financial accounts powered by stablecoins.

Meta’s interest in the technology reflects the growing interest in stablecoins among non-crypto companies, especially as congressional lawmakers debate two bills that would regulate stablecoins after years of regulatory uncertainty.

Meta’s crypto plans​

In January, Ginger Baker started at Meta as a VP of product and specializes in fintech and payments, according to her LinkedIn. She previously worked as an executive at fintech company Plaid and still serves on the board of the Stellar Development Foundation, a crypto organization that manages a layer 1 blockchain, according to her profile. She is helping steer Meta’s stablecoin explorations, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Meta declined to make Baker available for comment.

Meta reached out to crypto infrastructure companies earlier this year, according to three people familiar with the matter. The discussions remain at a preliminary stage, but they focus on a key feature offered by stablecoins compared with fiat currency—the ability to pay individuals across different regions without the high fees associated with other forms of payments, such as wire transfers.

One executive at a crypto infrastructure provider suggested Meta’s subsidiary Instagram could integrate stablecoins to facilitate small payouts in the range of $100 to creators in different markets, which would result in lower fees than if paid by fiat currencies. They described Meta as being in “learn mode,” adding that Meta would likely be agnostic toward the type of stablecoin it used, rather than choosing one provider, such as Circle’s USDC. Two other crypto executives also told Fortune they have held early discussions with Meta focused on the payouts use case.

Meanwhile, Circle hired Matt Cavin in March from the gaming blockchain company Immutable. He’s leading discussions with Meta and other Big Tech firms, according to one source familiar with the matter. Cavin’s LinkedIn profile describes his current role at Circle as leading “tier-1 strategic partnerships” without specifying the companies with which he’s working.


Circle declined to comment.

Stablecoin explosion​

Meta’s exploration of stablecoins is especially noteworthy since it was once the most high-profile Big Tech firm to explore crypto integration. In 2019, Meta announced a blockchain initiative that evolved into Libra, a proposed consortium of companies including Uber and PayPal that would launch a stablecoin backed by a basket of fiat currencies. After renaming the project Diem, Meta abandoned it in early 2022 under scrutiny from regulators. Meta sold Diem’s assets to the crypto-friendly bank Silvergate.

A number of employees who worked on Libra went on to start their own crypto companies, including David Marcus, who cofounded the Bitcoin payment infrastructure company Lightspark. Other alumni have also gone on to repurpose Meta’s technology to launch their own blockchains. The most notable are the founders of Aptos and Sui, two blockchains that run on a proprietary programming language developed by Meta called Move.


On Tuesday, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg appeared at a Stripe conference, where he acknowledged Diem’s failure in an onstage discussion with Stripe cofounder John Collison, according to a video provided to Fortune. “That thing’s dead,” Zuckerberg said.

Later, when asked about Meta’s tendency to be early to tech trends, Zuckerberg said, it’s “certainly more fun when you’re early than when you’re late.” But, he added, “there’s plenty of things that [we’re] late to, and have to claw our way back into the game, which I think we’re pretty good at that, too.”

 
They are a bit late. Most people know crypto is a scam now. That's why the crypto market never recovered after the last big crash. It's also why Nvidia and AMD's stock tanked. They depended on selling GPU's to crypto mining douche bags. Well, that market dried up really fucking fast. Everyone found out crypto is as valuable as water damaged pogs. LOL
 
@neger psykolog my reply is to your Community Happenings post, not this article
The idea of a stablecoin is completely and utterly ridiculous
And looking forward to Meta embracing something is essentially like seeking approval from glowie-approved kikes
Any genuine change towards financial freedom cannot possibly happen while abiding by the rules set by the state
 
They are a bit late. Most people know crypto is a scam now. That's why the crypto market never recovered after the last big crash. It's also why Nvidia and AMD's stock tanked. They depended on selling GPU's to crypto mining douche bags. Well, that market dried up really fucking fast. Everyone found out crypto is as valuable as water damaged pogs. LOL
You're retarded. At least read about the topic before making retarded claims.

Key word: stablecoin. There is no speculative value in it. One USDC = one USD. The money is made in the tiny exchange spreads and inflow/outflow fees. None of this relies on mining or GPUs and Ethereum quite a while ago moved to a proof of stake system from a proof of work system.

This is payment rails. They enable payments from a business to a person or p2p without an intermediary. This cuts out banks, credit card companies (Mastercard/Visa), app store taxes and all sorts of bullshit.

The money to be made in this isn't hyper speculative bullshit tokens or projects but rather providing an easy way for people to exchange the most widely used reserve currency on earth: USD. There is more money to be made in replacing Visa/Mastercard than there is in launching a bullshit speculative project that crashes a week later. If you do stablecoins properly then you can make small amounts of money at a very, very large scale for decades - this is the business model that Visa/Mastercard have.

3 trillion USD have been transacted via stablecoins in total. $700 billion USD have been transacted in the past 30 days across 650 million transactions.
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@neger psykolog my reply is to your Community Happenings post, not this article
The idea of a stablecoin is completely and utterly ridiculous
And looking forward to Meta embracing something is essentially like seeking approval from glowie-approved kikes
Any genuine change towards financial freedom cannot possibly happen while abiding by the rules set by the state
You do understand that crypto money significantly went towards putting Trump in power? Who is the most ardently pro-crypto president ever to the extent he has his own memecoin which people use to basically bribe him?

The brakes have come off on all of this. "the rules set by the state" are basically gone - Biden's administration was abnormally strict on crypto and was throwing bullshit regulatory actions towards hundreds of projects. That is now gone. There are bills going through the US government regarding stablecoins right now.

And "the rules set by the state" are to use US power projection to ensure the continued use and power of the US dollar. Stablecoins are primarily based on the US dollar which extends the shelf life of US power significantly.
 
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I doubt this is going to go anywhere. Normies don't want to touch anything crypto related even with a ten foot pole.
Again, this isn't "crypto" as people know it because it is not speculative - it is for all intents and purposes just an internet version of the US dollar. Nothing more, nothing less. Meta pays out tens of millions of people and if they say "fuck you, you will now accept your shitty video rewards in stablecoins" then people will not have any say in the matter.

People won't even know they're using "crypto" enough in the first place to stop and think about what exactly it is they're using because the product/format is US dollars in an app/wallet on your smartphone. This isn't NFTs, this isn't some get rich quick investment scheme. It is the US dollar becoming digital and being able to be freely transferred among intermediaries without Visa/Mastercard/Banks/PayPal.
 
You do understand that crypto money significantly went towards putting Trump in power?
You do understand that Trump being in power is not some magnificent and valuable good thing?
Who is the most ardently pro-crypto president ever to the extent he has his own memecoin which people use to basically bribe him?
Key word: stablecoin. There is no speculative value in it. One USDC = one USD
The USD is a memecoin.
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Being pro-crypto and pro-stablecoin are mutually exclusive positions.
Unless you're some sort of pragmatist
"the rules set by the state" are basically gone - Biden's administration was abnormally strict on crypto and was throwing bullshit regulatory actions towards hundreds of projects. That is now gone. There are bills going through the US government regarding stablecoins right now.
It is dangerous to go alone, take this 🌈
 
Ok so why though?

The same payment processing companies are acquiring the stable coin companies. So debanking is still a problem as it is with mainstream crypto

It's stable... But not to gold or a hard asset but to USD so it's effectively what? Just a way to print USD without being the fed? This is no better than banks issuing tons of debt for inflation.

Maybe I am missing it but...
So it's owned by the payment processors we all hate
Just because it's crypto doesn't make it anonymous
It's like USD
The companies using it are not going to be any kind of self reporting on taxes, also see the anonymity issue.

It just takes another system and lots of power to product the block chain so... How does this advantage anyone to use over plain USD in digital format?

It's just another crypto coin with its own ecosystem owned by the same (((assholes))). Why the fuck would I bother?
 
This cuts out banks, credit card companies (Mastercard/Visa), app store taxes and all sorts of bullshit.
This is the actual reason I can see this not working out. The government is going to do everything it can to kneecap this. Those are huge sectors of the economy and line go up good, anything that would make line not go up bad. And anything that gives government or massive businesses less control over commerce is also bad.
 
The USD is a memecoin.
1746990378792.webp
Being pro-crypto and pro-stablecoin are mutually exclusive positions.
Unless you're some sort of pragmatist
There are actually stablecoins launching for a variety of other global currencies concurrently with all of this. I'm not really well read on inflation bullshit and the US but know enough about it to know the USD may be in trouble as some countries are considering dropping it as a reserve currency. What can significantly help it though is spreading its use globally, such as by using stablecoins that become present on people's smartphones across the globe.

It's just another crypto coin with its own ecosystem owned by the same (((assholes))). Why the fuck would I bother?
There's many, many players besides the "large typical players". They are just trying to get their foot in the door because they have massive userbases. You are right to be concerned about them playing god but its infeasible for them to control everything with the way it is designed.
It's stable... But not to gold or a hard asset but to USD so it's effectively what? Just a way to print USD without being the fed? This is no better than banks issuing tons of debt for inflation.
This is true and a genuine concern but there is one big difference between the way USD is printed by the fed and the way this system works. Anytime they issue new USD it is broadcast to the world, so the moment they start fucking around too much is the moment they start shooting themselves in the foot and destabilize the system. There is an inherent time delay with the way the fed manages shit as well as how banks issue debt and from what I understand it can take many months for reports and shit to materialize which explain things - with this system it gets broadcast instantly whether they like it or not.

On top of that USDC I believe keeps a bank account with the same amount of USD it has ever issued digitally. Tether (USDT) is a lot more opaque but owns a shit ton of bitcoin, stocks and other shit that supposedly meet or exceed the amount of USDT it has ever issued (in Tether's case they had huge issues with being debanked for many years and is supposedly the reason why they are so secretive - many, many people have tried to bet on Tether/USDT depegging/imploding over many years but it has remained working).

Just to add one pivotal thing: If any of the stablecoins fuck up, then they basically "depeg" from the US dollar which is generally a catastrophic event. So if the internet money these companies are issuing loses trust in it or is mismanaged there will be a very obvious indicator that it has happened.
 
It's just another crypto coin with its own ecosystem owned by the same (((assholes))). Why the fuck would I bother?
Facebook (and every other corpo) is making a stablecoin because it’s a fucking money printer. Tether made $13B USD last year just parking cash in Treasuries. It’s not about freedom it’s about becoming the Fed without the rules.
 
Is there any chance that this will have any sort of privacy included, or will it be about the same as the Plastic Jew, AKA credit cards? XMR isn't a stablecoin but I don't know if something similar would be possible/likely.
USDC and the other stablecoins rely on smart contracts, which as far as anyone knows aren't possible on a private blockchain. Barring some sort of mathematical breakthrough which hasn't yet happened, privacy is never happening here.
 
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Seems dumb and unnecessary, and like any benefit of it existing will disappear as soon as the usual suspects (in this case payment processors and banks) figure out how to get their piece of the cake with this new technology. Kinda like... crypto rugpulls.

Also calling it (anything)coin is just making sure normies don't trust it. Bad optics.

On top of that, seeing the same retards who shill crypto excited about this thing just tells me it's sus and dumb.
 
You're retarded. At least read about the topic before making retarded claims.

Key word: stablecoin. There is no speculative value in it. One USDC = one USD. The money is made in the tiny exchange spreads and inflow/outflow fees. None of this relies on mining or GPUs and Ethereum quite a while ago moved to a proof of stake system from a proof of work system.

This is payment rails. They enable payments from a business to a person or p2p without an intermediary. This cuts out banks, credit card companies (Mastercard/Visa), app store taxes and all sorts of bullshit.

The money to be made in this isn't hyper speculative bullshit tokens or projects but rather providing an easy way for people to exchange the most widely used reserve currency on earth: USD. There is more money to be made in replacing Visa/Mastercard than there is in launching a bullshit speculative project that crashes a week later. If you do stablecoins properly then you can make small amounts of money at a very, very large scale for decades - this is the business model that Visa/Mastercard have.

3 trillion USD have been transacted via stablecoins in total. $700 billion USD have been transacted in the past 30 days across 650 million transactions.
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Uh oh someone didn't take their Risperdal. Now fuck off and go tell your mommy it's Risperdal time. LOL
 
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So... we're going back to The Company paying you in Company Coins that can only be redeemed at The Company Store?

Pretty sure there was a good reason why we stopped doing that, even to the browns who kept falling for it over and over and over again.
 
USDC and the other stablecoins rely on smart contracts, which as far as anyone knows aren't possible on a private blockchain. Barring some sort of mathematical breakthrough which hasn't yet happened, privacy is never happening here.
The US government unsanctioned tornado cash so that really isn't the case. If north Korea can hack into an exchange and steal 1.5 billion USD worth of crypto and launder it within a week into BTC then the world is your oyster.
So... we're going back to The Company paying you in Company Coins that can only be redeemed at The Company Store?

Pretty sure there was a good reason why we stopped doing that, even to the browns who kept falling for it over and over and over again.
USDC is issued by one company however it exists on multiple blockchains via bridges and therefore there isn't really any concept of a singular "company store". The same goes for tether/USDT.
What about conversion from fiat to stablecoin? Where does it go through?
Search USDT or USDC onramp. There's thousands of services across the globe including shady people in literally every city that will buy/sell for cash in very large amounts (inadvisable due to the risk of being kidnapped or murdered)
 
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