Under pressure from the U.S. Congress and users worldwide, Facebook is seeking an innovative solution to its data privacy-related issues.
In an effort to achieve these goals, the world's leading social network has formed an experimental blockchain group led by David Marcus, the previous head of Messenger and Coinbase board member.
The well-known Cambridge Analytica scandal, beginning in December 2015 first revealed the dangers of 'big data' breaches at Facebook.
Nearly 50 million users' data was harvested in an illegal breach by a political consulting firm later hired by President Donald Trump - raising mass awareness as to Facebook's security vulnerabilities.
Following an arduous past few months facing congressional hearings and user backlash, Facebook has re-evaluated its management systems in an effort to prioritize the issues it faces today.
The new internal team or blockchain group will be formed under the "New platforms and infra" division, which will be led by Facebook CTO Mike Schroepfer.
David Marcus, the previous head of Messenger at Facebook and Coinbase board member, has taken the mantle as the new head of Facebook's experimental blockchain group.
It is still unclear as to how Facebook plans to integrate blockchain into their platform, but according to Recode, the most obvious application would be encrypted data storage.
Facebook has not released any detailed plans to use a Facebook cryptocurrency and is keeping the new team's launch small at first - transferring Instagram's VP of Engineering, James Everingham and Instagram's VP of Product, Kevin Weil from their original posts to the exploratory blockchain team.
As a technology company, Facebook has embraced new innovations as a solution to maintaining consistent growth and continues to do so with this exploratory leap into blockchain.
Facebook Forms Blockchain Group for Solutions to Data Privacy
Veröffentlicht auf May 9, 2018
by Cryptoslate | Veröffentlicht auf Coinage
Coinage
Erwähnt in diesem Artikel
Neueste Nachrichten
Alle ansehen
First Mover: What's Next for Bitcoin as Wall Street Gets Vaccine Booster
Bitcoin was higher for a second day, staying in a range of between roughly $15,200 and $15,600, as news of progress in developing a coronavirus vaccine appeared to touch off a rally in U.S. stocks.
Market Wrap: Bitcoin Fails to Break $15.9K; Over 50K ETH Staked on Eth 2.0 Contract
Bitcoin gained Wednesday while Ethereum 2.0 staking has been ramping up.
Citibank Analyst Says Bitcoin Could Pass $300K by December 2021
A senior analyst at U.S.-based financial giant Citibank has penned a report drawing on similarities between the 1970s gold market and bitcoin.
Blockchain Bites: Data Unions. Hard Forks. And One Citi Analyst's Case for $300K BTC.
A Citibank managing director thinks bitcoin could hit $318,000.