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![]() by Staff Writers San Francisco (AFP) May 15, 2020
Singapore state-owned investment company Temasek has joined the Facebook-backed Libra project seeking to create a worldwide digital payments network, the Swiss-based Libra Association said Thursday. Temasek was among three new members announced for the association, including cryptocurrency investment firm Paradigm and private equity group Slow Ventures, both based in California. "The addition of these three new members to the Libra Association shows our commitment to building a diverse group of organizations that will contribute to the governance, technological roadmap and launch readiness" of Libra, said association vice chairman Dante Disparte. "Our participation in the Libra Association as a member will allow us to contribute towards a regulated global network for cost-effective retail payments," said Temasek deputy CEO Chia Song Hwee. Libra, a high-profile project launched by Facebook, is tentatively scheduled to launch this year but has been battered by severe criticism from some of the world's most influential financial authorities. Backers of Libra argue it can help people outside the banking system by lowering costs for many kinds of payments and transactions; critics say it could disrupt the global monetary system and currency markets. In its latest update, the association said it is seeking approval for digital coins in individual currencies, revamping its cryptocurrency initiative in a move aimed at minimizing disruption to the global monetary system. Under the new plan, separate "stablecoins" would be created and pegged to real-world money such as the US dollar and the euro. The association includes a number of nonprofit and e-commerce firms but has lost some high-profile initial members including Visa, Mastercard, eBay, Stripe and PayPal. bur-rl-sr/dan
![]() ![]() Australia media group wants tech giants to pay $400m a year Sydney (AFP) May 14, 2020 A leading publisher called Thursday for Google and other tech giants to pay Australian news outlets some US$400 million a year under a mandatory code of conduct ordered by the government. Australia last month announced plans to force Google, Facebook, and other internet firms to share advertising revenues earned from news content featured by their search engines. In an initiative being closely watched across the world, the government is due to unveil in July details of the mandatory payments as ... read more
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