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MD-420

08/23/16 2:16 PM

#76389 RE: lesgetrich #76388

Lol. More strawman arguments from you.

That sounds like a fantastic business plan from an mme's standpoint. Let's pay licensing fees on branding that literally has ZERO market penetration to a company that can't even file a 10k by their extension deadline twice in a row. That makes so much sense. Wow...Just wow.

But wait, we're sorry, our rolling machine doesn't work. Do you have a machine that you can use?

What a wet dream this is becoming.

BubbaInSC

08/23/16 2:49 PM

#76390 RE: lesgetrich #76388

RFLMAO - Licensing a cultivator? HUH? No such thing. Are you talking about an employee being contracted to an MME Cultivator to become and AGENT of that MME Cultivator.

Ummmm. Again, you are missing the boat. First of all, MCIG has no MME Certificate of any kind. Zero. Nada.

In addition, they have no service contracts of ANY kind with an MME Certificate holder - therefore, NO MCIG employees have an AGENT ID to work for ANYONE.

At the end of the day, 0 service contracts mean 0 MJ products - regardless of what MCIG wants to call it.




There is nothing in the regulations in Nevada or anywhere else that prevents mCig or any other company from licensing a cultivator to produce and distribute their brand, Rollies, based on mCig's specifications. This would be no different than any other manufacturer outsourcing a product built to their specs. Under this model, or if they supplied the labor as an MME Agent, mCig would not have to own or buy any MJ.

As far as intellectual property is concerned, it would be impossible at this time for any company to patent or get intellectual property protection for any MJ plant or variety as long as MJ is federally illegal. However, they could be protected as a trade secret (e.g. the exact formula for making coca cola has never been released). Nevertheless your point about the cultivator having the intellectual property rights would be wrong anyway...