The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) said it is open to working with Libra about potentially building new forms of digital identity. Libra believes blockchain forensics firms like Chainalysis, Elliptic and Coinfirm will help strengthen the case for “tiered KYC” by monitoring wallet profiles and transaction histories.
Non-profits in the Libra Association like Kiva may play a key role.
The organization leading the development of Facebook’s Libra stablecoin is assembling a range of approaches for connecting unbanked people around the world to the proposed blockchain network.
And it all starts with a foundational challenge.
When you use a card or a phone to buy a cup of coffee, a complex system of rules comes down the pipe with that transaction – rules that have checked that you are who you say you are.
Now, imagine you’re a villager in rural Uganda and you have a line of credit with a local shop which runs to $10. It’s hard to see, in spaces almost devoid of infrastructure, how the same class of so-called know-your-customer (KYC) requirements will be applied.
Using digital tools to meet the challenge of identifying and including unbanked people in the global financial system is what Libra and its supporters say is the project’s greatest opportunity.
The scale of that mission is spelled out by Matthew Davie, chief strategy officer at Kiva, a Silicon Valley-based microfinance platform that is one of the Libra Association’s founding social-impact partners.
“We have to see a systems change in how the financial sector works,” he told CoinDesk.
Kiva, which recently announced a partnership with the government of Sierra Leone to use biometrics to assign digital wallets that record transactions on a blockchain, is exploring the concept or tiered KYC, where digital means can be used as a first step to identifying users in situations where government-issued, paper-based identifiers may be scarce. Davie said:
Dante Disparte, head of policy and communications at the Libra Association, also believes the answer to this difficult problem is here, it just needs to be distributed. Citing existing regulatory thinking on tiered approaches to KYC, combined with the transparency of blockchains, Disparte told CoinDesk:
It’s a concept enormously vitalized by the addition of blockchains, Disparte added.
“It goes back to the function of a blockchain and having a network of nodes validating transactions,” he said. “The tamper-resistance of the whole engine means it just becomes a higher-fidelity model with potential risk-reporting in real time, versus a self-reporting network that relies on competitive banks.”
Pointing out that blockchain is a decade-old technology and that digitally native mobile money such as Vodafone’s M-Pesa has already made a difference to financial inclusion, he said:
It’s a concept enormously vitalized by the addition of blockchains, Disparte added.
“It goes back to the function of a blockchain and having a network of nodes validating transactions,” he said. “The tamper-resistance of the whole engine means it just becomes a higher-fidelity model with potential risk-reporting in real time, versus a self-reporting network that relies on competitive banks.”
Pointing out that blockchain is a decade-old technology and that digitally native mobile money such as Vodafone’s M-Pesa has already made a difference to financial inclusion, he said:
It’s important to remember this is all aspirational, however. To be clear, when Libra Association members will develop their own wallets (including Calibra, Facebook’s wallet), those wallet providers must ensure compliance with anti-money laundering (AML) and counter terrorist financing (CFT) requirements and best practices when it comes to KYC checks.