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Meta Platforms to Sunset Novi Digital Wallet This Fall

The curtain will fall on Meta Platforms’s embattled stablecoin project after a brief run as a tool for money transfers.

The social media platform announced that the Novi digital wallet pilot would end on Sept 1, and advised all users to withdraw funds at their earliest convenience. No deposits into the wallet will be allowed after July 21, and users’ transaction history and other data will be inaccessible from Sept 1.

The Novi app will be taken down from app stores. However, technology from Novi developed over many years will have a place in the metaverse plans of Meta, the company told Bloomberg, having already tested non-fungible tokens in its Web3 efforts.

Meta’s fateful journey into payments space

Meta’s foray into digital currencies was spearheaded in 2018 by David Marcus, who left the company in Nov 2021, and Morgan Beller, a former partner at Andreessen Horowitz.

Initially named Libra, the project aimed to help people store, transfer, and spend money internationally for a meager fee. Unlike bitcoin, Libra would be backed by low-risk assets, including U.S. Treasuries and bank deposits.

The project attracted key early backers, including Uber, Spotify, Vodafone, Visa, and MasterCard. To allay regulators’ fears regarding the project’s connection to Facebook, Meta’s previous name, Marcus and Beller created the Libra Foundation in Switzerland, of which Facebook was a member.

But Marcus was given the cold shoulder when he tried to woo Washington regulators in 2019. Key politicians voiced their distrust of Facebook, and soon, some early backers began pulling out.

Not long after that, Libra was renamed Diem, and Facebook’s digital wallet, which had previously been called Calibra, became Novi.

Diem said that the U.S. dollar would back the new eponymous currency. A pilot was planned for spring 2021 that would issue a small amount of Diem and launch Novi.

But the U.S.
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