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Nortel, in bankruptcy, sells IPv4 address block for $7.5 million
Owen,
I (and I presume Eric Goldman, author of the post I referenced) was looking at Judge James Ware's actual ruling (http://docs.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/california/candce/5:2006cv02554/181054/41/). I don't see anything in there discussing that 'the transfer had to be done in a manner that complied with ARIN policy' or Kremen was 'required to sign the RSA'. It isn't a very long document (and surprisingly easy to read for a court judgement). Not being a lawyer, I can't be certain, but all I see is "time-barred" and "statute of limitations". The only thing relevant I can see in subsequent filings is that Kremen and ARIN came to a settlement in which ARIN didn't have to do anything and Kremen wouldn't pursue the matter. Can you point to where the Judge said anything (much less definitively) about complying with ARIN policy, signing an RSA, etc.?
Regards,
-drc
On Mar 24, 2011, at 10:26 AM, Owen DeLong wrote:
> The judge definitely ruled that the transfer had to be done in a manner that
> complied with ARIN policy and made it clear that the recipient was, indeed,
> required to sign the RSA.
>
> So, yes, Kremen also lost on the address policy basis, which I believe may
> have been an additional ruling subsequent to what is covered at the cited URL.
>
> Owen
>
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
> On Mar 24, 2011, at 12:24 PM, David Conrad <drc at virtualized.org> wrote:
>
>> On Mar 24, 2011, at 8:15 AM, William Herrin wrote:
>>> Legacy address transferability has been disputed before. Kremen v.
>>> ARIN. Kremen lost.
>>
>> Yes, Kremen lost, but not based on anything related to address policy:
>>
>> http://blog.ericgoldman.org/archives/2007/01/kremen_loses_ch_1.htm
>>
>> Regards,
>> -drc
>>
>
- References:
- Nortel, in bankruptcy, sells IPv4 address block for $7.5 million
- From: eugen at leitl.org (Eugen Leitl)
- Nortel, in bankruptcy, sells IPv4 address block for $7.5 million
- From: zeusdadog at gmail.com (Jay Nakamura)
- Nortel, in bankruptcy, sells IPv4 address block for $7.5 million
- From: dot at dotat.at (Tony Finch)
- Nortel, in bankruptcy, sells IPv4 address block for $7.5 million
- From: bclark at spectraaccess.com (Bret Clark)
- Nortel, in bankruptcy, sells IPv4 address block for $7.5 million
- From: bicknell at ufp.org (Leo Bicknell)
- Nortel, in bankruptcy, sells IPv4 address block for $7.5 million
- From: tore.anderson at redpill-linpro.com (Tore Anderson)
- Nortel, in bankruptcy, sells IPv4 address block for $7.5 million
- From: woody at pch.net (Bill Woodcock)
- Nortel, in bankruptcy, sells IPv4 address block for $7.5 million
- From: tore.anderson at redpill-linpro.com (Tore Anderson)
- Nortel, in bankruptcy, sells IPv4 address block for $7.5 million
- From: bill at herrin.us (William Herrin)
- Nortel, in bankruptcy, sells IPv4 address block for $7.5 million
- From: drc at virtualized.org (David Conrad)
- Nortel, in bankruptcy, sells IPv4 address block for $7.5 million
- From: owen at delong.com (Owen DeLong)