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ICANN is likely to suspend spamhaus's domain.
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As long as it is just them, fantastic.
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nothing against spamhaus -- but if this happened it might force some foreign companies to pay attention to their u.s. lawsuits. keep in mind, they all do business with the u.s. and in the u.s. and then shrug off lawsuits.
lindsay - read that article - it's going to happen to you too :2 cents: |
hahaha owned!
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Excellent news. Spamhaus are 100% scammers that list anyone for spamming for whatever reasons they want without any proof whatsoever. They need to be stopped IMO :2 cents:
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so much for independent judge jury and executioners with no accountability to anyone, anywhere. who could have seen that ultimately falling apart? :)
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While i'd like to see spamhaus get fisted in the bunghole, I am not too happy with the idea that their domain could/can get yanked by a US court putting pressure on ICANN.
Next thing you know US courts are yanking domains from non Americans all over the place.... |
And this affects me how? It doesn't. They ignored a lawsuit in a US court, now they must face the consequences. Fuck 'em.
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agreed and agreed... :thumbsup :Oh crap :Oh crap |
I personally think this is very bad... i hate spamhaus BUT if we allow the us GOV to have control of the domain names that mean they can eventually control what is on the internet.
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i dont know how long you have been around but i am sure that Evan at least remembers Paul Vixey/RBL and all the shit they caused by unilaterally blocking shitloads of IPs and IP blocks at their own descretion - mostly to people who had absolutely nothing to do with spam or spammers - which at one time included everyone that was using Ibill. even though Ibill fully supported the worlds top spammers at the time in more ways they ever admitted to, 1000's of others got fucked hard and had no idea why or what was going on. |
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I wonder if icann may fill the void left vacant by spamhaus, and fight spammers directly. :Oh crap |
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Who's the registrar for spamhaus?
WG |
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Sponsoring Registrar:Tucows Inc. (R11-LROR) |
this is bad news for the internet....censorship is never good we need to get ICANN and ARIN and other organizations to be like the UN and be operated on US soil but not fall under its laws/rules.
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dumb asses
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Ah yes. ownage.
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This isn't US government censorship. This is a foreign company that was nailed in a US court and then very publically laughed off the judgement against them.
The confiscation of domains after a civil court judgement isnn't anything new. It's been going on for awhile in things like copyright infringement cases where the guilty party is not capable of paying the judgement. If Spamhaus can't pay the millions they were ordered to pay, then it's time to seize property. In this case, their domain name is the easiest thing to get at. |
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I tend to agree, but at the same time, if they were ordered by a court to stop blocking the guy, then they should have complied. You can BET YOUR ASS that had it been a US company, there would have been all sorts of fines and shit imposed, and the domain would have been yanked. |
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weird. i guess it was nice of their attorneys to put down the crayons, coloring books and finger paints to make the first arguments... too bad the federal court appearance apparently came at nap time. |
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They deserve it, they blacklist any ip they feel like and when you try to get it reversed they laugh at you. They even listed some of my ip's as a Rosko listed spammer and when i contacted them about it they told me i was this person and they wouldnt do anything. I hope they go down in flames!!!!!
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Spamhaus wishes to impose their will using US legal jurisdiction, yet doesn't want to be legally underpinned by US legal jurisdiction.
Catch 22 Tuff noogies for them. |
oy vey, the drama!
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And, sure.. agree on Spamhaus - that is not really the issue. |
Spammers are funny. :)
The good thing is that this will be the end to the US ICANN. I'm surprised that some spammers here actually think that Spamhaus can be shut down. It's used by many ISPs, they'll continue to use it after the domain change also. |
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Can't see *any* judge in the UK (or possibly the EU) even starting to listen to a case where the defendants are a foreign entity and not in court - it basically falls outside the courts jurisdiction, regardless the activity is "international" by the nature of the net. Bottom line, the "offense" must be an offense under the laws of the country hosting the legal entity - eg Spamhaus and the "host country" is the UK in this instance. All laws of other countries are irrelevant unless they are extradictable offenses or stuff like murder, drugs trafficking etc. But sure - would be nice to see Spamhaus go :) PS Another recent example of this is the gaming laws in the US. There is a US citizen wanted in connection with gaming operations outside the US. Wondered why the US were slow in issuing a promised extradiction application - it turns out the courts where the gaming is controlled from have no intention of listening to extradiction agreements because the alleged offenses are not in violation of any local laws. |
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well, don't forget that the USA invented the "internet", funded by the taxpayers of america. |
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If an aggrieved party wishes to raise a legal action against a corp in another jurisdiction - it's normal to make application for the case to be heard within that jurisdiction, - not in another country (eg.. in this case the US). Not saying I agree with the operation of Spamhaus - that's another matter :winkwink: |
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