On Mon, Oct 05, 1998 at 02:13:11PM -0700, Tony Li wrote:
karl@Mcs.Net (Karl Denninger) writes:
Specifically, RFC2008 says:
While it has never been explicitly stated that various Internet Registries use the "address ownership" allocation policy, it has always been assumed (and practiced).
That sentence, in particular the last five words of that sentence, are extremely important. 10+ years of a given practice and set of operating rules cannot be overturned by fiat.
One might notice that these words were written in an RFC. Not in a law book.
They have all of the legal weight of a Jim Flem-o-gram.
Tony
Then so does ARIN's and the IANA's ability to control and delegate addresses. You can't have it both ways. Either the IETF process is valid, in which case the precedents it sets are also valid, or it is not, in which case none of the existing "organizations" have any validity at all, INCLUDING THOSE POSTULATED UNDER THE WHITE PAPER AND THE IANA2 DOCUMENTS. Which would you prefer? -- -- Karl Denninger (karl@denninger.net) http://www.mcs.net/~karl I ain't even *authorized* to speak for anyone other than myself, so give up now on trying to associate my words with any particular organization.