Don_ih is referencing a corporation that literally doesn't exist anymore - the bankrupt and dissolved Ilford Imaging Ltd.
That entity went through numerous structural and ownership changes - including non-UK ownership - before it collapsed in 2005. At the end, they were doing things like allowing re-branding of their film to people like Arista. That was during the time when all film companies were in freefall, as the market was collapsing.
A very small portion of the former UK employees of that entity bought up many of its assets, including the right to use the name "Ilford" on some products, and resurrected a portion of its business. They used a brand new corporation incorporated by them - Harman Technology Ltd. - to buy those assets and run the new "Ilford Photo", which is a trading name that didn't exist before.
One of the changes instituted at that time was a policy change - stop diluting the Ilford brand by selling product that bore the Ilford brand to re-branders. They then subsequently bought the Kentmere brand (and moribund facilities, which were closed) which gave them the opportunity to both sell budget products under the Kentmere brand and to make those products available to the re-branders. That had the additional benefit of not requiring that they dilute their policy of not selling Ilford branded film for rebranding.
Harman Technology Ltd. also markets other products that don't bear the Ilford or Kentmere brand names. That includes Harman branded inkjet paper. They also are the UK distributors for Paterson darkroom equipment - all of which is a significant difference from the old, defunct, Ilford Imaging.
A few years later the former employees who incorporated Harman Technology Ltd. sold that corporation to a UK based hedge fund - Pemberstone Venture Capital - who appear to have a business model that emphasizes running its investments as a growth oriented profit making, ongoing concern.
I've seen no significant change to how Harman Technology Ltd. runs their business, compared to the time before Pemberstone bought it. They have re-oriented their outreach a bit - much less engagement here and much more social media and own website based engagement, but that is merely a change in marketing focus.
In comparison, when Harman Technology started up, there was a sea change in how they did business, compared to the former, failed Ilford Imaging Ltd., which had stooped to rebranding FP4 (or was it FP4+?).
The subject of this thread is a small bunch of 6 year old film someone has pasted labels over top of and called their own. Harman Technology's response to a query about it is essentially not to answer the query. No conclusions can be reached from that about Harman's policies.