Correct.
The AMPR 44 address space was assigned for amateur radio use before ARIN
was started.
Address space assigned before ARIN is known as Legacy Assignment and is not
controlled by ARIN policies.
A party wishing to transfer control of a legacy IP space (or portion
thereof) can apply to ARIN to record the transfer.
When a party registers something with ARIN, that party must signed an
agreement with ARIN to be bound by the terms of the ARIN services agreement.
So the buyer and the portion they purchased is under ARIN policies via
whatever Legacy Registration Services Agreement (LRSA) that entity may
have/has negotiated with ARIN.
On Sat, Aug 17, 2019 at 8:48 AM Jim Popovitch via 44Net <
44net(a)mailman.ampr.org> wrote:
On Sat, 2019-08-17 at 08:20 -0700, K7VE - John via
44Net wrote:
Because the buyer uses ARIN. Net 44 predates
ARIN and has not joined
ARIN,
as I understand it. I also have similar address
space myself.
Do you possibly mean that 44net|ARDC didn't have a normal service
contract with ARIN?
Who manages your whois/rDNS/etc services for your similar address space?
-Jim P.
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