Biggest problems we had as a service provider is that the block is registered 
to a corporate entity which is then acquired or dissolves and then you have to 
figure out who actually has control.  We always tried to push the dispute 
process to go between the customer and the RIR when this happens.  It takes too 
many legal resources to get involved in figuring out who owns what during an 
acquisition or dissolution.  Often this particular resources does not get 
called out specifically and can be a problem.  Sometimes they get treated like 
corporate intellectual property and sometimes they get treated more like a 
utility.  It’s a legal nightmare to get in the middle of it.  I have had cases 
where it was so complex we forced one of the parties to get a court order one 
way or another.

Steven Naslund
Chicago IL

> it's a real shame there is no authorative cryptographically verifyable 
> attestation of address ownership.
>

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