Rhoobarb
Well-Known Member
Just read this on a local forum regarding a company called Monster Mills.
Take a look.
http://free90free.com/peshchat/viewtopic.php?t=820
Take a look.
http://free90free.com/peshchat/viewtopic.php?t=820
Funkenjäger said:Anyone have any additional insight on this?
I was about to preorder a monster mill, based largely on the reputation of crankandstein (awesome lifetime guarantee, etc), but if this turns out to be true I'm not so sure anymore.
I did email the monster mills guy to ask about the mills at one point a few days back, and the guy that responded was Fred Francis. But, googling it, I do see that both Don Obenauer and Fred Francis are commonly associated with Crankandstein, so I have no idea who to believe.
Rhoobarb said:Man, what a mess. They both sound like real pices of work to me. And I don't know who to believe. It all sounds suspect.
But who really OWNS the crankandstein name? If what Fred says is true, then he's the one that created and ran the company itself - and Don was only the manufacturer. I'm not a lawyer and don't know all the facts but from what I've read it doesn't seem obvious that Don should somehow automatically own the name when he wasn't running the business - and I suppose the whole thing is really up in the air because they didn't have a bunch of formal, legal contracts defining the company, just informal agreements. If anything, without concrete agreements, is it even clear that one of them should entirely own the business name? If they each have some partial right to it, then it seems they'd both be at fault to a degree, as they're both still using the name in some way.Cheesefood said:First off, what he's doing is called "cybersquatting" and it's illegal. If he was drawing a paycheck from C&S, then he was an employee or a contractor and therefore needs to respect their intellectual property (i.e. their brand name). If he gets sued, I guarantee he'll have to forfeit profits.
That also sounds like a reasonable plan... just wait until the dust settles and see how both companies turn out.iamjonsharp said:Yikes. Sounds like staying away from both Crankandstein and Monster Mill is the best idea...
iamjonsharp said:Yikes. Sounds like staying away from both Crankandstein and Monster Mill is the best idea...
Bobby_M said:We have no idea if there was any official partnership in place. If Fred didn't trademarked the C&S brand or patent the design, he's got no leg to stand on. If it was an official partnership, any one of the partners leaving would force dissolution of the legal entity unless otherwise accounted for in the written partnership agreement (probably wasn't). It's a lot of speculation but there will be plenty of people ready to buy the Monster Mill and report on the experience. I think when it comes to mills, the key is finding a manufacturer to work cheap. These things are labor intensive... ask Yuri.
iamjonsharp said:Yikes. Sounds like staying away from both Crankandstein and Monster Mill is the best idea...