1. RIRs don't sell address space or make any claim of the merchantability, routability, or functionality of the address space they hand out. 2. RIRs assets do not include the unregistered addresses. They are not transferrable and have no book value. As such, it would be difficult for an RIR customer to successfully sue. Most likely if they explained the problems to the RIR, they could trade for a less impacted block, but, suing the RIR is unlikely to accomplish much. The RIR afterall, only provided a registration service to show in a public database that as far as the particular RIR was concerned, those integers were unique to the network operator in question. They make no claims about the actions of others WRT those addresses, they just promise not to issue them to someone else. Owen --On Tuesday, November 4, 2003 7:10 AM +0200 Hank Nussbacher <hank@att.net.il> wrote:
On Mon, 3 Nov 2003, Ray Wong wrote:
I'm starting to figure that, given the delays, there's been enough damage done that 204.89.224/24 will never be able to get off the blocking lists anyway, so perhaps I'll turn it back in afterall. *sigh*That's what I get for trying to find low-cost ISPs willing to announce portable space.
So a RIR giving out that /24 would in fact be selling "damaged goods" and the customer who got it would be able to sue. I think RIRs have to make a larger effort to protect their assets.
Ray Wong rayw@rayw.net
-Hank
-- If it wasn't signed, it probably didn't come from me.