Everything You Need to Know about Kodak's KODAKCoin

In 1975, an Eastman Kodak (NYSE: KODK) engineer invented the first digital camera. The company scuttled the project, hoping to delay the day when digital cameras might usurp film-based photography. But that decision left Kodak in the unfortunate position of playing catch-up in the decades that followed.

Perhaps having learned from its experience with digital cameras that timing is everything, Kodak isn't willing to let the boom in cryptocurrencies pass it by. The 130-year-old photography and film company plans to enter the digital currency and blockchain business, albeit somewhat indirectly, with hopes of breathing new life into its shares.

Here's what you should know about the most interesting story in finance today.

All about the KODAKCoin

Buying and selling the rights to use images and video is a big business, worth as much as $14 billion a year, according to estimates by Shutterstock (NYSE: SSTK). Kodak wants a piece of it: It announced that it will develop a platform for managing and selling the rights to pictures and other content.

In simple terms, Kodak will create an image and licensing marketplace (KODAKOne), and take a slice of every transaction for itself. But rather than build this business in a traditional way, Kodak is apparently going out of its way to use the "blockchain" to do it, according to its press release:

With KODAKCoin, participating photographers are invited to take part in a new economy for photography, receive payment for licensing their work immediately upon sale, and for both professional and amateur photographers, sell their work confidently on a secure blockchain platform. KODAKOne platform provides continual web crawling in order to monitor and protect the IP of the images registered in the KODAKOne system. Where unlicensed usage of images is detected, the KODAKOne platform can efficiently manage the post-licensing process in order to reward photographers.

In other words, Kodak wants to do with blockchain what, say, Shutterstock does without blockchain. Photographers will be able use the KODAKOne platform to license their images to people and businesses that want to use them, and transact in KODAKCoin rather than traditional currencies.

Kodak film products in its early years
Kodak film products in its early years

Image source: Kodak.

In theory, people who want to buy the rights to images will happily go through the added step of converting their dollars or euros, for instance, to buy KODAKCoin, which they can then spend to license images and creative content from photographers. Photographers will apparently embrace the idea of getting paid in KODAKCoin, which they can then convert into their currency of choice.