Kodak launches its own cryptocurrency called KodakCoin
Shares of Eastman Kodak more than doubled after the company waded
into the digital-currency world with plans to launch an initial coin offering,
media reports on Thursday said. On Tuesday, Kodak had said that the coin,
KodakCoin, would be the backbone of a new platform that will help photographers
license their work and track the unlicensed use of their images, Efe reported.
"For many in the tech industry, 'blockchain' and 'cryptocurrency' are hot
buzzwords, but for photographers who've long struggled to assert control over
their work and how it's used, these buzzwords are the keys to solving what felt
like an unsolvable problem," said Kodak CEO Jeff Clarke.
The coin uses the technology behind bitcoin, called blockchain, to
keep a digital ledger of the photographs. In an initial coin offering, a firm
creates its own bitcoin-like digital token and offers it publicly for sale. The
token is usually designed to unlock some service on an online platform, like
with Kodak's project.
Kodak's foray into cryptocurrencies boosted shares 119 per cent on
Tuesday and put the company's market value at $290 million, according to
FactSet. More than 65 million shares changed hands on the day, and the stock
soared another 46 per cent in after-hours trading. Since emerging from
bankruptcy protection in 2013, its highest-volume day before Tuesday occurred
when 2.15 million shares changed hands, according to FactSet. Even with Tuesday's
rise, Kodak is down more than 50 per cent over the last 12 months. The company
has struggled to adapt to new technology in recent years, Dow Jones added.
For the past several years, people have been experimenting with
ways to use blockchain. At its essence, blockchain is an open record of
transactions, maintained in an online ledger that is distributed across a
network of computers, that cannot be tampered with. That makes it like an
indelible time stamp, which could be useful in a case of copyright and
digital-rights management.
Initial coin offerings are a relatively new phenomenon that
exploded in 2017, raising more than $4 billion last year, though regulators
like the Securities and Exchange Commission have warned about the risks and
have shut down some egregious malefactors. Kodak is the latest company to see
its shares soar after publicizing plans to explore the world of bitcoin,
blockchain and initial coin offerings.
On Tuesday, Kodak's shares climbed $3.70, or 119 per cent, to
$6.80, Dow Jones added in a report. Others getting into the area include a
former electronic cigarette company, a biotech firm, and an entity formed last
year through a reverse merger with a sports-bra maker. A company that owns
several burger restaurants, Chanticleer Holdings Inc., saw its shares rise more
than 40 per cent on January 2 when it announced that it would use blockchain
technology to provide a currency for its customer loyalty programs.
A firm formerly known as Long Island Iced Tea Corp. managed to
avoid getting its shares delisted after it changed its name to Long Blockchain
Corp. last month and said it was pivoting to investing in blockchain
technology. Sometimes, even rumours are enough to send a company's shares
higher, Dow Jones added. Western Union Co. and Seagate Technology PLC have both
popped in the past few days after little-known websites claimed the companies
had ties to a digital currency called Ripple.
Western Union and Seagate didn't respond to a request for comment.
Ripple, the company, declined to comment. KodakCoin's initial coin offering, or
ICO, will begin on January 31 and is open to accredited investors from the US,
UK, Canada and other select countries. A Kodak spokesman said the ICO is being
offered by WENN Digital, a technology company that created the KodakOne
platform and the KodakCoin cryptocurrency. Kodak and WENN entered a licensing
partnership for the platform and KodakCoin.
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