Hi John,

   You may say "legally purchasing" rights, but I truly don't know what these 
parties think 
   they purchased, since it can't be the ability to inject routes and have them 
accepted 
   (no one can provide that) nor the right to use the entry in the registry, 
when the 
   circumstances are contrary to policy.

I guess they figure they are buying what the Nortel bankruptcy judge called the 
“exclusive right to use” the addresses.
Whatever it is they are buying, they are routing and using the addresses. They 
move....


   This is not new concept; e.g. you can buy a radio station broadcast license 
from an 
   existing operator, but it's not actually a sale until it passes regulatory 
approvals to be 
   reassigned to you.  Until that time, your purchase is without any actual 
substance.   

/John

Consider if the buyer of the radio station could begin and continue 
broadcasting without regard to regulatory approval?
Does that make a listener un-hear a broadcast? Or would the incentives lead to 
lots of wildcat radio stations pending approval?

Regards,
Mike


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