Kik is shutting down its messaging app to focus on SEC cryptocurrency fight - The Verge
(theverge.com)
The saga of Kik — the once-popular messaging app — is getting even stranger.
CEO Ted Livingston has announced that the company is shutting down the Kik messaging application and focusing entirely on its Kin cryptocurrency.
It’s an effort for the company to save money as it battles the Securities and Exchange Commission over whether its initial coin offering (ICO) should count as a security.
The SEC alleges that the company was using the $100 million Kin ICO as a last bid “hail Mary” to try to turn things around after a decline in popularity. That the subsequent lawsuit over the initial coin offering is what’s ultimately causing Kik to shutter. ironic, to say the least.
AN IRONIC END FOR KIK
Livingston notes that in order to continue fighting the SEC, the company is taking three actions: shutting down Kik entirely, firing over 100 employees to reduce the company to “an elite 19 person team,” and focusing exclusively on “converting Kin users into Kin buyers.
”The plan to keep fighting the SEC sounds fairly ambitious, given the current state of Kin and how closely it’s tied to the Kik app. As Livingston goes on to explain, “Today most cryptocurrencies rely on speculative demand from exchanges to fuel their crypto business models.
But Kin isn’t available on most exchanges, so we can’t rely on speculative demand.
”Instead, the company is planning to get customers to buy Kin and actually use it — a tall order for any cryptocurrency, much less one that’s facing the kind of opposition that Kin is.
Livingston says that the company has a plan for that, too, with the remaining employees working to expand the Kin blockchain to support more transactions, work with developers that support Kin, and build a new mobile wallet for buying Kin.
CEO Ted Livingston has announced that the company is shutting down the Kik messaging application and focusing entirely on its Kin cryptocurrency.
It’s an effort for the company to save money as it battles the Securities and Exchange Commission over whether its initial coin offering (ICO) should count as a security.
The SEC alleges that the company was using the $100 million Kin ICO as a last bid “hail Mary” to try to turn things around after a decline in popularity. That the subsequent lawsuit over the initial coin offering is what’s ultimately causing Kik to shutter. ironic, to say the least.
AN IRONIC END FOR KIK
Livingston notes that in order to continue fighting the SEC, the company is taking three actions: shutting down Kik entirely, firing over 100 employees to reduce the company to “an elite 19 person team,” and focusing exclusively on “converting Kin users into Kin buyers.
”The plan to keep fighting the SEC sounds fairly ambitious, given the current state of Kin and how closely it’s tied to the Kik app. As Livingston goes on to explain, “Today most cryptocurrencies rely on speculative demand from exchanges to fuel their crypto business models.
But Kin isn’t available on most exchanges, so we can’t rely on speculative demand.
”Instead, the company is planning to get customers to buy Kin and actually use it — a tall order for any cryptocurrency, much less one that’s facing the kind of opposition that Kin is.
Livingston says that the company has a plan for that, too, with the remaining employees working to expand the Kin blockchain to support more transactions, work with developers that support Kin, and build a new mobile wallet for buying Kin.
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Francisco Gimeno - BC Analyst A difficult stand for this company. We learn from all this that even the regulations are not there, any start up or company should act as if they were there, applying the normal rules for investment, like in this case, for securities. ICOs, and other new fund raising brought by blockchain and crypto are already doing this, to avoid getting in trouble seas.