What I find especially interesting in this is that it seems to leave Judge Kocoras without any good way of enforcing his $11.7M judgment against Spamhaus--which would seem to bolster Spamhaus chief Steve Linford's original assertion that the judge lacked jurisdiction to hear the case, at least from a practical point. But then, given what's happening in other areas of the law, like patents and copyright, what's practical and what's legal seem to have less and less relationship to each other.
There are still more shoes to drop in the case, and ultimately the Internet community needs to find a way to help Linford clarify the legality of Spamhaus' actions in blacklisting spammers, because despite what e360Insight might claim, there is such a thing as spam, people don't want it, and Spamhaus plays an important role in helping them kill it.