Very sorry to hear that this problem is STILL continuing. Why doesnt Kodak recall the bad batches of film?? Why let customer's take this risk?
If one were to buy bananas or avocados, put them in a pantry for a month and then return to use them, they would not only be inedible, they would resemble a prop for a horror movie. So people tend to use food well before it truly goes bad.
But film is not a banana or an avocado, it is instead a somewhat perishable item that it’s users typically either use right away or nibble away at portions of stock purchased over time. Sometimes that time frame can be well over a year. So this problem will STILL take time to fully flush out in terms of what should be done with stock that was sold, if all of a batch number was affected and what distribution channels or retailers sold the defective product.
Kodak’s liability on this matter does not by law, mandate a recall, only replacement of defective product.
I have photographs that were made unprintable by this problem, that is potential lost income from those rolls, as many as you lost if I recall. But I understand full well their limitations in situations like this so I did as I always do with any of my chosen photography related companies and that is work from a standpoint of a partnership rather than an adversarial one.
This will simply take time to work it self out and in my opinion, Kodak is dealing with this issue in a manner that would be consistent with Fuji, Ilford, etc.