There are LAWs (not RFCs) stating that you cannot do this. Also, you have signed papers (which undoubtedly you don't remember) which state that the plates are owned by the state and you must return them upon request, are non-transferrable, etc etc etc. Did you sign any such contract when you got your IP addresses? Are there any laws in your jurisdiction stating the ownership and appropriate use of your addresses? There is no workable analogy in this case because there are no contracts and no laws regarding anything on the Net at this point. Until ARIN makes you sign an acceptable-use agreement (and makes pre-1996 "owners" sign it too), there can be no enforceable policy other than what the core router owners decide. Routability determines address assignment far more definitively than a NIC board room full of cigar smoke and $10k fees. Stephen Sprunk At 13:59 09 03 97 -0500, Lon R. Stockton, Jr. wrote:
So, since I paid money for my car registration & license plates, I should be able to sell my plates to someone else to put on their car?
On Sun, 9 Mar 1997, Brett L. Hawn wrote:
Been there, read that, and I still say they're selling space, leasing space, auctioning space, etc. Fact of the matter is they are _CHARGING MONEY_ (not bannana peels) for services rendered. Their services are to hand out IP space and maintain databases, therefor they are SELLING space.