Thanks Jorge. Very interesting and relevant
information. Importantly, also speaks to DN as property
question, with clear legal codification in this regard.
These domain seizures are no less an important issue than OFAC, and cannot simply not be addressed by this group. And it has been argued from practically the first day in this group, but has been completely neglected.
What such seizures actually become are wholly inappropriate means of extension of US law globally. This has been done most till now for enforcement of extremely stringent US intellectual property laws globally, but can be done for other things. What it creates is a chilling effect, entities, including business, begin to make sure that they work within US laws, even when they may not have US as a main or significant place for doing business, or even not at all. This of course is wholly inappropriate, and to repeat, makes DNS an illegal weapon for global domination and control by the US.
It must be noted that domain names have been seized even in cases where a business had no US based end. This is a case of seizure by US gov of domain name of a Spanish travel company selling Cuban trips to a British citizen, though with embargo related intentions. https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2008/03/us-interferes-with-travel-to-cuba/
US has made, or arranged for, property
seizures in areas other than DNS, especially wrt trade in
generic drugs, even when the business was being carried out
between non US parties and never touching US territory.
I dont see how can this group simply ignore
this most significant issue.
And I also see no case-by-case remedy for it. Only general immunity under the IOI Act, with the required negative list of exceptions, can address it.
parminder
"The domain name seizure process used by Operation In Our Sites was codified in 18 U.S.C. § 981(b)(2), which provides a legal framework for property seizures by the government. Before the seizure, government officials are supposed to investigate suspected websites to find out if they actually purchase or access counterfeit items. The government then contacts the copyright holders to confirm ownership of the intellectual property and suspected infringement. Following the investigation, ICE and NIPRCC officials present the resulting evidence to the U.S. Attorneys, and check the domain name registration.
If the domain name was registered in the U.S., the government petitions a magistrate judge to issue a seizure warrant for the domain name. With the warrant, the domain name's title and rights are transferred to the U.S. government. After the seizure, the government is supposed to send a written notice of the forfeiture deadline to the website operator within 60 days from the seizure date. The website owner can file the claim against the government within 35 days after receiving the notice. If the owner files a claim, the government has 90 days to prove that the property is subject to forfeiture. If the owner does not make a claim against the seizure, or the government successfully proves a valid seizure, the domain name is forfeited to the government.[9][10]"