True Lawfare -- The Fight to Seize Iran's Domain Name Continues
A month ago, we wrote about an effort by several plaintiff's lawyers, representing terrorist victims, to seize the Iran domain name (.IR). Turns out there was even more to it than we were aware of at the time, as the same group of lawyers have filed similar writs of attachment against Syria (.SY) and North Korea (.KP).
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A month ago, we wrote about an effort by several plaintiff's lawyers, representing terrorist victims, to seize the Iran domain name (.IR). Turns out there was even more to it than we were aware of at the time, as the same group of lawyers have filed similar writs of attachment against Syria (.SY) and North Korea (.KP).
ICANN (the organization that runs the world domain name system) has now filed its response. ICANN makes several interesting legal arguments:- ccTLDs (the country domains) are not "property" subject to attachment rather they are an addressing service;
- As such, the ccTLDs are not "owned" by the countries to which they are assigned; and
- More to the point, if they were property, they would not be "in the US" and therefore subject to attachment -- rather the ccTLDs are located where the servers that contain the domain are located -- in this case in Syria, Iran and North Korea