[ih] Some Questions over IPv4 Ownership

Ernie Rubi ernesto at cs.fiu.edu
Thu Oct 14 16:53:49 PDT 2010


I'm not sure I read that decision as broadly as you do; in fact, judicial districts are separate entities.

Even if it was to be read broadly the issue could be decided totally differently in other jurisdictions.

The law review article itself recognizes that case law is scarce.

I'm not looking for any particular angle, I'd just like to explore all sides of the debate.  My paper would likely be 3 pages long if I took that USDC decision as binding precedent not only here in the US, but internationally.


On Oct 14, 2010, at 2:55 PM, John Curran <jcurran at arin.net> wrote:

> On Oct 14, 2010, at 11:49 AM, Jack Haverty wrote:
>> On Thu, 2010-10-14 at 10:30 -0400, Ernesto Rubi wrote:
>>> Someone, somewhere really ought to spend a whole semester locked in a
>>> room researching this.  If only I had graduate assistants...hehehe
>> 
>> I think this will happen when somebody decides to sue somebody else
>> about ownership rights.  That could trigger a whole new industry around
>> Internet Law, not only in the US but all the other countries on the
>> planet.  I'm surprised it hasn't happened already.
> 
> It's already occurred, with the result being a District Judge reconsidered their
> prior order regarding to IP addresses and instead affirming that IP addresses are 
> "administered in a public trust".   Relevant law article here: 
> http://www.chtlj.org/sites/default/files/media/articles/v024/v024.i2.Ryan.pdf
> 
> I provided this information to Ernesto, but apparently it made more sense 
> to continue with the specious property thread rather than anchor it in any 
> actual jurisprudence.
> 
> /John
> 
> John Curran
> President and CEO
> ARIN




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