Source: Adobe/S.Gvozd

Social media users believe they have captured screenshots of a beta version of China’s much-awaited central bank digital currency (CBDC).

WeChat users are believed to have gained access to the screenshots on Tuesday this week. Images have since been shared to Twitter in a series of tweets from Matthew Graham, the CEO of Sino Global Capital, a tech investment firm that works with mainland Chinese interests. Graham says he has also seen the app firsthand.

The images appear to show how the CBDC, known in China as the DC/EP (digital currency/electronic payment), is being tested by the Agricultural Bank of China, one of the four state-owned banks believed to be piloting the token.

DC/EP original pics, installation and interface* — Matthew Graham (@mattysino)

As previously reported, the central People’s Bank of China is thought to have approved pilots in conjunction with the Agricultural Bank, as well as the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the Bank of China and the China Construction Bank, along with three mobile carriers – per mainstream Mainland Chinese media reports that Beijing has neither confirmed or denied.

Americans still trying to figure out if they should put on a face mask while China pushes out a revolutionary techn… https://t.co/tlAVYw6Psz — Matthew Graham (@mattysino)

The pilots are believed to have begun in Shenzhen and Suzhou, but WeChat users have stated that they may have also been extended to Xiongan and Chengdu.

Graham tweeted a link to what he said was a download link for a beta app for Agricultural Bank customers in test sites – although this appears to be broken or inaccessible outside Mainland China at the time of writing. Graham stated that the link had likely been “pulled.”

Ling Zhang, Executive Director of M&A, Global Fiat at Binance, also shared the news.

Seems that testing wallet app is available for download. 4 cities will be available for the trial to begin with, in… https://t.co/nUNiLTNXHD — Ling Zhang (@lingzh1220)

Speaking to Decrypt, Graham stated that the app makes use of a wallet features transfer options and a QR code scanner, and makes use of NFC technology, a feature on many modern smartphones. Many smart card readers, which are used widely in China, are also fitted with NFC technology.

He claimed,

“[My] first impression is that the app looks slick, it’s a pro job in the Silicon Valley tech sense.”

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