IMO:
It appears as if there was something on the roller while it was being produced (or scratch in hologram process) but I really don't believe such blemishes (even excess ink) will have an "error" like premium as seen in paper. Actually- in paper error collectors ignore such deviations as they're used to seeing such and usually seek perfect notes. For example- if there is ink missing- then it must come from a fold of paper or be quite major to produce interest. Ink smears must be fairly dramatic to sell.
There will be many of these inferior notes produced for a few years to come yet (until they iron out the production process or increase QC). If a hologram is missing, a quadrant of the base or colour is missing (something quite dramatic) than that will be worth keeping and getting interested in.