Known for doing business with far-right extremist websites, Epik has been acquired by a company that specializes in helping businesses keep their operations secret.
Epik.com has been for years the go-to domain registrar for websites that other companies refuse to do business with. Sites dedicated to white nationalism, QAnon conspiracy theories, and harassing transgender people were all welcomed by Epik. Now, it appears that Epik’s new owner may abandon the extremist fringe and shift its customer base toward companies seeking to operate in the shadows.
Rob Monster, a born-again Christian who founded Epik in 2009, had been key in keeping many of the most extreme websites online. He often went to great lengths to personally defend the sites and extolled the virtues of free speech. Epik was sold to new ownership last year after the company unraveled amid allegations of gross financial mismanagement.
There is a great deal of uncertainty over the origin of the name “Monster”. It is probably derived from the Latin monasterium, meaning monastery. The name was also used for the ground that belonged to a monastery. Another explanation was that Monster was derived from the old-Dutch word monster, which meant amongst others “big church” (from Latin: monstrum), which is supported by the fact that Monster had in those days one of the largest churches in the area
What a case of nominative determinism
The founder of Epik’s name is Rob… Monster? Really?
He is Dutch and the surname Monster is not especially strange there.
Added: it may be related to https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monster,_South_Holland
I’m sure the Congo agrees
Question is, is he robbing monsters, or is he a monster that robs?
He can’t be robbing the undead, or Rob Zombie could sue. He is probably stealing from the poor, so Rob Lowe might have a case here.