US lawmaker
calls for Facebook to pause cryptocurrency project - details inside
A leading US House lawmaker
on Tuesday called on Facebook Inc to halt development on its new cryptocurrency
and for company executives to testify before Congress, adding to global
concerns about what the digital currency could mean for data privacy and security.
Maxine
Waters, who chairs the House Financial Services Committee, said Facebook should
halt development of the product, dubbed Libra, until Congress and regulators
can review the issue, and called on company executives to testify before
Congress.
"Facebook is already too big
and too powerful, and it has used that power to exploit users' data without
protecting their privacy. We cannot allow Facebook to run a risky new
cryptocurrency out of a Swiss bank account without oversight," said
Senator Sherrod Brown, the top Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee, in a
statement.
U.S.
Senator Mark Warner, a Virginia Democrat who also sits on Senate Banking
Committee, expressed concern that through Libra, Facebook was using its scale
in social networking to achieve dominance in adjacent markets like mobile
payments. French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire called for more regulation of
tech companies.
"This
instrument for transactions will allow Facebook to collect millions and
millions of data, which strengthens my conviction that there is a need to
regulate the digital giants," he said in an interview on Europe 1 radio.
But
Bank of England Governor Mark Carney said he had an "open mind" on
the potential utility of the product, while warning it could face strict regulation.
Facebook
has engaged with regulators in the United States and abroad about the planned
cryptocurrency, company executives said. They would not specify which
regulators.
A
US regulatory source briefed on the matter said Facebook had been in communication
with U.S. regulators but added it was still unclear how the currency would be
structured and whether it would directly fall under any existing U.S.
regulatory regimes.
Switzerland's
financial watchdog said it was in contact with the initiators of the Libra
project but declined to comment on whether it was obtaining specific regulatory
permission or status.
Markus
Ferber, a senior German lawmaker in the European Parliament, said in a
statement that Facebook's new coin should put "regulators on high
alert" and called on the European Commission to start work on a regulatory
framework for virtual currencies.
"Facebook has data on
billions of people and has repeatedly shown a disregard for the protection and
careful use of this data," she said in a statement. "With the
announcement that it plans to create a cryptocurrency, Facebook is continuing
its unchecked expansion and extending its reach into the lives of its users."
Markus Ferber, a senior German
lawmaker in the European parliament, said in a statement that Facebook's new
coin should put "regulators on high alert" and called on the European
Commission to start work on regulatory framework for virtual currencies.
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