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Looks like Emtel does some of the work and maybe calls more of the shots now.

The pandemic plus going all virtual may have contributed to a loss of interest in internet governance most people take for-granted and/or don't understand.

This has me curious: what happens if for some reason the entire board and all officers at a company collectively resign?

Is it possible to get “locked out” of a company’s governance mechanisms?

It depends on the laws under which the company (or other organization) is constituted. In most cases the shareholders of a company can hold a meeting to elect new directors; in the case of a society without shareholders, the society membership would be able to elect directors.

For a society with no members, the society would simply be dissolved -- typically that only happens if a society is insolvent and the members leave rather than being stuck with the debts.

Part of the reason the governance is failing is due to NRS [1]. The NRS is running a concerted disinformation campaign [2] and a sue everyone and everything campaign to cripple AfriNIC [3]. The root cause is someone got some up blocks from out of the AfriNic region awhile back and started using for nefarious internet activities. They got discovered and the ip blocks reclaimed[4]. A change of the bylaws was instigated to create a new rule to allow the export of ip blocks from the region, that failed. Finally the court cases started rolling in to try and use the courts to allow the export of the ip blocks and or cripple and scare employees of AfriNic. So far, the offense team is winning, no ceo has been selected due to the chaos, the board is no longer there and some elements of the community have been paid off to ensure no consensus inthe annual meetings. Also, there’s the natural split of the Africa community along francophone and anglophone lines which is making things difficult. It’s a terrible time for AfriNic….

1. https://www.nrs.help/

2. https://m.youtube.com/@numberresourcesociety/videos?view=0&s...

3. https://afrinic.net/court-cases

4. https://afrinic.net/ast/afrinic-press-release-litigation-202...