A U.S. judge has denied an order that would have suspended the domain name for The Spamhaus Project, averting a potential quagmire over how U.S. legal rulings apply across the global Internet.Spamhaus, a group of computer security experts based in London, creates a database used by security vendors to block unsolicited bulk e-mail, known as spam. Last month, an e-mail marketing company, e360 Insight, won an $11.7 million judgment against Spamhaus in U.S. District Court, Northern District of Illinois. The ruling also called for Spamhaus to remove e360 from its blacklists.Spamhaus, which has been sued in the United States several times, typically ignores the rulings. It says U.S. courts do not have jurisdiction over it since the group is based in the United Kingdom. Spamhaus maintains that e360’s e-mail constitutes spam and violates U.K. law. The U.S. lawsuits against Spamhaus typically end there, but earlier this month e360 raised the stakes. On Oct. 6 it asked the U.S. court to force the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and Spamhaus’s domain registrar, Tucows, to suspend its domain name.The request sparked speculation that ICANN, which is subject to U.S. law, would be required to enforce that law internationally by, for example, shutting down a foreign website. ICANN said later that even if a court did order it to shut down a domain, it couldn’t do that since that power lies with individual registrars. For the time being, it appears the tussle is moot. Judge Charles P. Kocoras wrote in his denial of e360’s request that cutting off all of Spamhaus’s activities would “not correspond to the gravity of the offending conduct.”Spamhaus CEO Steve Linford said a ruling the other way would have been alarming, particularly to governments concerned that the United States has held administrative control over the Internet through ICANN for too long.“Of course, we are extremely relieved that the judge has ruled in this way,” Linford said by telephone Friday. Spamhaus, which has retained new legal counsel, is pursuing how it can get U.S. courts to recognize that it does not fall within their jurisdiction, Linford said. In the past, Spamhaus has advised bulk e-mailers to sue it in U.K. courts. It believes they are reluctant to do so, he said, because of tougher U.K. antispam laws and legal rules that require losing parties to pay court costs.-Jeremy Kirk, IDG News Service (London Bureau)Related Links: Spamhaus Appeals Possible Shutdown Ruling ICANN: Spamhaus Can’t be Shut Down by Us Spamhaus Hit With Shutdown Threat by U.S. Court Spamhaus Turns Blind Eye to U.S. Court RulingCheck out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content brandpost Rebalancing through Recalibration: CIOs Operationalizing Pandemic-era Innovation By Kamal Nath, CEO, Sify Technologies Jun 08, 2023 6 mins CIO Digital Transformation brandpost It’s time to evolve beyond marketing to create meaningful metaverse moments Insights on the results of the Protiviti and Oxford University survey: Executive Outlook on the Metaverse, 2033 and Beyond By Kim Bozzella Jun 08, 2023 6 mins Digital Transformation feature 10 hottest IT jobs for salary growth in 2023 The demand for tech workers hasn’t slowed down, as rising salaries reveal the most sought-after tech professionals for 2023, according to data from Dice. By Sarah K. White Jun 08, 2023 8 mins Salaries IT Jobs Careers interview Oshkosh CIO Anu Khare on IT’s pursuit of value The specialty truck maker’s IT chief sees tech-enabled transformation being fueled by a relentless focus on strategic fit and customer value — and passionate business involvement. By Dan Roberts Jun 08, 2023 9 mins Automotive Industry Manufacturing Industry IT Strategy Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe