Facebook's Marcus Steps Down From Coinbase Board

Published on by Coindesk | Published on

David Marcus is stepping down from the board of directors at cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase, citing his new assignment at Facebook leading the social media giant's blockchain strategy.

Marcus, a vice president at Facebook since 2014, joined the board at Coinbase, now valued at $8 billion, in December of last year.

Five months later, Marcus was named Facebook's new blockchain research lead. The company has not released any details about the work it is doing in the field, though Marcus' team reportedly has fewer than a dozen members.

Marcus has notably indicated in past remarks that Facebook may embrace blockchain, specifically referencing the idea of sending cryptocurrency payments through its Messenger app.

In a statement provided to CoinDesk Friday, Marcus said his decision to resign was "Because of the new group I'm setting up at Facebook around blockchain."

A Coinbase spokesperson said Marcus' decision to step down was made to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest, but declined to elaborate.

His departure comes less than a month after Facebook exempted Coinbase from its blanket ban on cryptocurrency-related ads.

Armstrong tweeted in July that the exchange's advertisements would once again appear on the platform, a few weeks after Facebook said it would update its policy "To allow ads that promote cryptocurrency and related content from pre-approved advertisers." Facebook did not explain why Coinbase specifically received a carve-out.

Coinbase ads now appear on both Facebook and Instagram, which Facebook owns.

There are currently no efforts underway to fill Marcus' board seat, a Coinbase spokesperson said.

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