IPv4 blocks are a finite technical resource that can be bought, warehoused, and leased; when private actors or offshore entities accumulate large allocations, they can monetize them globally and, through litigation or financial tactics, paralyze regional registries. That dynamic can throttle local ISP growth, transfer economic rents overseas, and expose gaps in multistakeholder internet governance.
— Recognizing IP addresses as tradable assets reframes digital‑sovereignty and telecom policy: regulators must guard allocations, enforce residency/use rules, and plan address‑space transitions to prevent private capture from stalling national connectivity.
EditorDavid
2025.11.29
100% relevant
Lu/Larus’s purchase and leasing of ~10 million IPv4 addresses, Cloud Innovation’s 6.2M Afrinic allocation, and the Mauritius legal actions that froze Afrinic’s accounts and halted address distributions.
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