Kin | |
---|---|
Development | |
Original author(s) | Kin Foundation |
White paper | Kin: a decentralized ecosystem of digital services for daily life May, 2017 |
Initial release | 10 September 2017 |
Code repository | github.com/kinecosystem |
Development status | Active |
Developer(s) | Kin Foundation |
License | Open-source license |
Website | kin.org |
Ledger | |
Supply limit | 10,000,000,000,000 |
Kin is a cryptocurrency used as money that can be earned, spent, or transferred within a digital ecosystem of consumer applications. Kin seeks to offer app developers a way to earn revenue that does not involve monetizing personal user data or displaying ads. Developers can earn Kin by integrating Kin into their app experiences. The project is supervised by the Kin Foundation, a nonprofit corporation established to manage the governance and growth of the cryptocurrency.[1][2]
Kin was created by Kik Interactive, Inc., the creators of the KIK Messenger mobile app. The project conducted an initial coin offering (ICO) from September 12 - 26, 2017,[3] raising roughing $47.5M. Combined with an earlier $50M from institutional investors, the total amount raised by Kik was around $97.5M.[4]
On September 23, 2019, Kik Interactive CEO Ted Livingston announced that the company was shutting down Kik Messenger to focus on Kin.[5] However, shortly after the shutdown announcement, multimedia holding company MediaLab AI, Inc. announced that it was acquiring Kik Messenger and would continue to operate the app and its Kin integration.[6]
At launch, Kin started as an Ethereum ERC-20 token. In December 2017, during a YouTube Q&A session, Ted Livingston announced that Kin would be migrating to the Stellar blockchain because Ethereum was not performant enough to support Kin.[7]
In March 2018, the Kin Foundation announced an updated plan to have Kin operate on dual blockchains - Ethereum for liquidity purposes and Stellar for its transactional needs. The plan also proposed that users would be able to atomically swap Kin tokens between the blockchains.[8]
In May 2018, the Kin Foundation pivoted from the previously announced plan, sharing that it would fork Stellar and operate its own blockchain. This move allowed Kin to remove the need for fees applied to every transaction on the Stellar blockchain.[9]
In May 2020, Kik Interactive created a proposal to migrate Kin once again, this time to the Solana blockchain. The proposal stated that while Kin's migration to a Stellar-forked blockchain was an improvement over operating on Ethereum, it was still not an ideal consumer experience. A migration to Solana would provide a significant upgrade in performance and additional storage space for transactional metadata.[10] In June 2020, the Kin Foundation board and community approved the proposal.[11] The migration to Solana kicked off on December 15, 2020, with Kin becoming a Solana Program Library, or SPL, token.[12]
The Kin Rewards Engine (KRE) is an algorithmic mechanism that allows apps to earn rewards for integrating and driving adoption of the Kin cryptocurrency.[13]
In June 2019, the SEC sued Kik Interactive over its 2017 ICO claiming that it was an illegal securities offering.[14][15] The SEC charged Kik with selling its tokens to U.S. investors without registering their offer and sale as required by the U.S. securities laws.[16]
On October 21, 2020 the lawsuit came to a close when a federal district court agreed with the SEC's assessment that Kik's ICO was a securities sale.[17] In addition to a being assessed a $5M penalty, Kik was required for the next three years to provide notice to the SEC before engaging in enumerated future issuances, offers, sales, and transfers of digital assets.[18]