Contingencies |
12 Months Ended |
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Dec. 31, 2025 | |
| Commitments and Contingencies Disclosure [Abstract] | |
| Contingencies | Note 8 – Contingencies
Legal
From time to time, the Company may be involved in various litigation matters and disputes arising in the ordinary course of business. The Company reviews its lawsuits, regulatory investigations and other legal proceedings on an ongoing basis. The Company records liabilities for contingencies, including legal costs, when it is probable that a liability has been incurred before the balance sheet date and the amount can be reasonably estimated.
Various legislative and executive bodies in the United States and in other countries may, in the future, adopt laws, regulations or guidance, or take other actions that could severely impact the permissibility of digital assets generally and the technology behind them or the means of transacting in or transferring them. It is difficult to predict how or whether regulatory agencies may apply existing or new regulation with respect to this technology and its applications.
Colocation Agreement
The Company utilizes third-party data center facilities to support its digital asset mining operations. Specifically, the Company has entered into a colocation and hosting services agreement with an independent data center provider for the ongoing provision of rack space, electrical power capacity, network connectivity, and cooling infrastructure required to operate the Company’s mining hardware. These arrangements do not convey to the Company the right to control the use of any identified physical asset within the data center, and the service provider retains substantive substitution rights of the assets at all times. Accordingly, consistent with the guidance in ASC 842, the Company has concluded that the arrangement represents a service contract and does not contain a lease, as the Company does not obtain control of an identified asset during the contract term.
The colocation and hosting contracts generally include variable charges based on power consumption and other usage-based elements. Under ASC 842, the Company recognizes expense for such service arrangements as incurred, and no right-of-use (“ROU”) asset or lease liability is recorded on the consolidated balance sheet because the contract is outside the scope of lease accounting.
For the year ended December 31, 2025, the Company incurred $3,353,355 in colocation and hosting-related service expenses, which are included within cost of revenues in the accompanying consolidated statements of operations.
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