UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
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PGMEDIA, INC., |
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d/b/a
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Plaintiff, |
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97 Civ. 1946 (RPP) |
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NETWORK
SOLUTIONS, INC. and |
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NATIONAL
SCIENCE FOUNDATION, |
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Defendants.
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PLAINTIFF PGMEDIAS REPLY MEMORANDUM IN
OPPOSITION TO DEFENDANTS CROSS-MOTIONS FOR
SUMMARY JUDGEMENT, IN OPPOSITION TO NSFS
MOTION FOR STAY, AND IN SUPPORT OF PLAINTIFFS
MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT ON COUNT VI
Of Counsel: |
BLUMENFELD
& COHEN |
PAUL, WEISS, RIFKIND, WHARTON
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1615
M Street, N.W., Suite 700 |
& GARRISON
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Washington,
D.C. 20036 |
1285 Avenue of the Americas
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202-955-6300
(ph) |
New York, New
York 10019 |
202-955-6460
(fax) |
212-373-3000 (ph) |
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212-373-2628 (fax)
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Attorneys for Plaintiff pgMedia, Inc.
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Dated: July 16, 1998 |
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
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2 |
ARGUMENT |
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I. |
NSF DOES NOT ENJOY STATUTORY OR CONTRACTUAL AUTHORITYEITHER
TO CONTROL NSIS ADMINISTRATION OF THE INTERNETS ROOT SERVER
SYSTEM OR TO IMMUNIZE NSIS ROOT SERVER CONDUCT FROM LIABILITY UNDER
SECTION 2 OF THE SHERMAN ACT 5 |
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A. |
NSFs General Statutory Powers Do Not Authorize it to Direct, Control,
Approve or Restrict Expansion of TLDs on the Internets DNS
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B. |
NSF Lacks Authority Under International Law To Unilaterally Restrict
Expansion of TLDs On the Internet
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C. |
Even If NSF Had Statutory Authority Over DNS
Expansion, NSF Made No Specific Reservation of Such Power In the Cooperative
Agreement and Has Not, In Fact, Exercised That Power |
10 |
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1. |
The Cooperative Agreement Does Not Authorize NSF to Control
Either TLDs or the DNS Root Server |
11 |
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2. |
NSF Has Not Exercised the Control Over DNS Expansion That the June 1997
Directive Claims
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14 |
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D.
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Under Decades of Settled Antitrust Law, NSF Has No Power to Provide Antitrust
Immunity to NSI in the Absence of Express Congressional Authorization
Lacking in This Case
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1.
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Antitrust Immunity Is Unavailable to NSI Pursuant To Any Recognized Basis
for Exemptions from Sherman Act Liability
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18 |
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2. |
The So-Called "Federal Instrumentality Doctrine," Even if Valid,
Is Inapplicable to Section 2 Cases Challenging Use of Monopoly Power Rather
Than the Contract Establishing a Monopoly Franchise |
21 |
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3. |
NSIs "Antitrust Standing" Argument is Not Ripe for Decision
and Merely Reiterates Its Immunity Claims
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25 |
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II. |
NSFS "DIRECTIVE" CONSTITUTES
AN UNLAWFUL PRIOR RESTRAINT OF CONSTITUTIONALLY PROTECTED SPEECH |
26 |
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pgMedia Has Standing to Challenge NSFs
Actions on First Amendment Overbreadth Grounds |
26 |
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B. |
NSF Misconstrues Its Prior Restraint of Speech as a Content-Neutral Time,
Place and Manner Restriction
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29 |
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C. |
NSF Cannot Survive the Heightened Constitutional Scrutiny Reserved for
Internet Speech
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III. |
NSFS REQUEST FOR A STAY IS INAPPROPRIATE
BECAUSE THERE IS NO ASSURANCE THAT THE "NEW CORPORATION" WILL
PROMPTLY RESOLVE THE ISSUES OF DNS EXPANSION THAT THE GOVERNMENT HAS REFUSED
TO DECIDE FOR THE PAST 18 MONTHS |
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CONCLUSION |
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT
COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
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PGMEDIA, INC., |
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d/b/a
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Plaintiff, |
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v. |
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NETWORK
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NATIONAL
SCIENCE FOUNDATION, |
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Defendants.
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PLAINTIFF PGMEDIAS REPLY MEMORANDUM IN
OPPOSITION TO DEFENDANTS CROSS-MOTIONS FOR
SUMMARY JUDGEMENT, IN OPPOSITION TO NSFS
MOTION FOR STAY, AND IN SUPPORT OF PLAINTIFFS
MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT ON COUNT VI
Pursuant to the Courts June 1, 1998 Pretrial Order ("Pretrial Order"),
plaintiff pgMedia, Inc., d/b/a Name.Space
("pgMedia"), by its attorneys, respectfully submits this memorandum
in opposition to the cross-motions for summary judgment submitted by defendants
Network Solutions, Inc. ("NSI")
and the National Science Foundation ("NSF"),1/
in opposition to NSFs accompanying motion for stay, and in support of
pgMedias motion for partial summary judgment on Count VI of the Second
Amended Complaint.2/
PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
The Pretrial Order directed the parties to brief three potentially
dispositive issues related to NSFs legal authority to (1) issue the June
1997 "directive" to NSI -- in which it told NSI not to add new TLDs
to the Internet root zone server -- and (2) immunize NSI from liability under
Section 2 of the Sherman Act. Instead of directly answering these limited questions,
the defendants are now trying to transform this litigation into a political
case tied to the United States governments recent "policy statement"
on Internet administration.3/ This effort to distract attention
from the legal merits should be rejected, because the law is well-settled that
unless and until Congress acts by granting express immunity, or by authorizing
an agency to extend immunity, private conduct is fully subject to the antitrust
laws. No express immunity is claimed, and no implied immunity is available under
long-standing Second Circuit cases, so the antitrust issues presented in this
litigation are actually quite straightforward.
The government complains that this case is "an effort
by plaintiff to derail [the policy statements] carefully developed process."
NSF Opp. at 2. That is backwards. pgMedias requests for access to the
Internets root zone, and this litigation, both preceded by months
the initiation of the governments policy process. More importantly, the
policy statement is not a legally binding document. It is expressly not "a
substantive regulatory regime for the domain name system . . . . [It] is not
a substantive rule, does not contain mandatory provisions and does not itself
have the force and effect of law." 63 Fed. Reg. at 31748. In reality, NSI
pleaded with the government to declare its legal authority over the root server
system, but the Commerce Department decided not to do so.4/
At least in part, this may be because pgMedia argued forcefully in that proceeding
that the Commerce Department lacked statutory authority to restrict addition
of new TLDs on the Internet. In any event, the simple fact is that it is the
government -- which refused to take any legally binding action in the Commerce
Department proceedings and declined NSIs request to clarify Internet jurisprudence
by asserting governmental authority over the DNS -- that now wants this Court
to find the very legal authority it declined to exercise in the "policy
statement." Raising the policy statement as a barrier to judicial action
is thus disingenuous.
In this memorandum, pgMedia focuses on the specific factual and legal questions posed by the Court. The responses of NSI and NSF to these questions are plainly off-point. Both rely on general assertions of NSFs power to control the root server system without demonstrating any specific basis for such power in the statutes or contract governing the NSF-NSI relationship. Both base their arguments either on contested facts for which they have failed to introduce any admissible evidence or which violate the burden of proof standards governing summary judgment. Finally, NSIs claim of antitrust immunity grossly misreads controlling precedent from this Circuit and improperly tries to create a new antitrust exemption where none exists.
Nor is NSFs position on First Amendment restraints correct. NSF is wrong because standing exists based on third-party speech, just as billboard owners can sue for First Amendment restrictions on what advertisements they can sell. The NSF "directive" is clearly not a time-place-manner restriction, but rather compelled speech and a complete preclusion of all other TLD speech. And whether or not TLDs constitute "commercial speech," Internet speech still merits the highest level of constitutional scrutiny.
As to its stay request, NSF reports that this case may "soon" be moot. That is not so, because under the Commerce Department policy statement the "new corporation" that the government wants to take over DNS management is not formed, may not be fully operational until October 1, 2000, and may or may not decide to add any of pgMedias TLDs to the Internets root server system. Since the government has already "frozen" pgMedias TLDs under the NSF directive for nearly 18 months, inflicting irreparable injury on plaintiff, no further delay is warranted or appropriate in disposing of this litigation.
ARGUMENT
The Pretrial Order directs the parties to brief three specific
and narrow legal questions. Two of these -- the authority of NSF to restrict
addition of new TLDs to the Internets root, and whether any such authority
provides antitrust immunity for NSI -- are predicates to a grant of summary
judgment in favor of defendant NSI.5/ The third question
-- whether NSFs June 1997 "directive" violates the First Amendment
-- is a predicate to the grant of summary judgment against defendant NSF. Unfortunately,
on close examination neither NSFs nor NSIs memoranda actually address
these central issues, but rather rely in large part on vague generalities that
are inconsistent with the undisputed facts of record and with the well-settled
law governing antitrust immunity and First Amendment restraints.
I. |
NSF DOES NOT ENJOY STATUTORY OR CONTRACTUAL
AUTHORITY EITHER TO CONTROL NSIS ADMINISTRATION OF THE INTERNETS
ROOT SERVER SYSTEM OR TO IMMUNIZE NSIS ROOT SERVER CONDUCT FROM LIABILITY
UNDER SECTION 2 OF THE SHERMAN ACT |
In order to rule against pgMedia on its Section 2 "essential
facilities" claim, the Court must find both that NSF had authority to issue
the directive and that the directive operates to immunize NSI from the
scope of the antitrust laws.6/ Under the undisputed facts,
neither conclusion is permissible. First, NSFs general statutory power
to "foster and support" scientific research under the National Science
Foundation Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1861 et seq. (the "NSF Act"),
does not authorize regulation or control of the Internets DNS system.
Second, the Cooperative Agreement, which never mentions either DNS or the Internet
root server, provides no contractual basis for NSF to assume control of NSIs
root server administration. Third, the law is settled that antitrust immunity
must stem from Congress, not the unilateral decisions of a government agency;
thus, the absence of any power for NSF either to immunize awardees under the
Federal Grant and Cooperative Agreement Act, 31 U.S.C. § 6301 et
seq. (the "Grant Act"), or to immunize other private parties operating
the Internets infrastructure, is fatal to any claim of immunity.
Finally, NSIs claim that the so-called "federal instrumentality
doctrine" provides immunity against pgMedias antitrust suit is meritless.
The doctrine only prevents antitrust attack of the Cooperative Agreement itself.
But here, pgMedia does not challenge the Cooperative Agreement and does not
claim that NSIs monopoly over ".com" registrations under that
contract is unlawful. No court has extended this narrow antitrust rule to cases,
like this one, that challenge a contractees conduct against competitors,
i.e., its use of monopoly power, rather than the legality in the
first instance of a government-granted contract monopoly. The "doctrine"
asserted by NSI, even if valid in this Circuit, is therefore completely irrelevant.
Since NSI can point to neither express nor implied immunity, it is fully subject
to the federal antitrust laws prohibiting unlawful abuse of monopoly power.
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A.
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NSFs General Statutory Powers Do Not
Authorize it to Direct, Control, Approve or Restrict Expansion of TLDs on
the Internets DNS |
NSF argues that because it had the power to enter into the Cooperative Agreement
with NSI, this authority by definition extends to control of DNS and the Internet
root server system, and thus to issue the directive to NSI that no new TLDs
can be added to the DNS. Citing its general powers under the National Science
Foundation Act to "foster and support" scientific research and academic
computer networks, 42 U.S.C. § 1862(g), NSF contends that it therefore
has the authority to "translate its statutory mandate into action"
by controlling the addition of new TLDs to the root. NSF Opp. at 13. Indeed,
NSF appears to maintain that any NSF activity that is broadly "in pursuit
of its statutory objectives" is by definition lawful. Id. at 15,
citing Thomas v. Network Solution, Inc, and National Science Foundation,
97 CV 02412 (TFH), 1998 WL 1191205 (D.D.C. Apr. 6, 1998).
The flaw in this argument is that a statutory grant of authority
to "foster and support" scientific research and access to computer
networks does not on its face translate into any specific power to regulate,
control or restrict the activities funded by the government. And it certainly
does not directly or indirectly authorize NSF to control or regulate the Internet
in a manner inconsistent with the requirements of the antitrust laws ensuring
open and competitive markets. The NSF Act does not charge NSF with managing,
administering, controlling or regulating any aspect of the Internet or any facet
of the Internets DNS and root server systems. The assumption that
Congress has vested NSF with "the responsibility for . . . supervision
over the Internet" is just that, an assumption. NSI Opp. at 26. Nothing
in the Acts language provides this responsibility, and neither defendant
points to anything in the legislative history suggesting a congressional intent
to confer such powers. Indeed, it is uncontested that NSF "is under no
mandate to support domain name registration" on the Internet. NSF Mitchell
Dec. ¶ 8 (Manishin Dec. Exh. 4)(emphasis supplied).7/
Thus, whether or not "NSF has acted in accordance with all governing statutes"
in entering into the Cooperative Agreement, NSF Opp. at 14, is immaterial, because
the initial issue is whether Congress delegated to NSF the power and responsibility
to oversee and control the Internets domain name system.
No evidence of such a delegation of congressional power has
been advanced by defendants.8/ The only thing NSF can really
argue is that it has been acting in a general capacity to "administer"
the Internet for several years. Yet, historical tradition says nothing about
whether NSF enjoys any congressionally delegated powers specifically to regulate
expansion of the DNS root server system. In its SEC filingswhere accurate
disclosure of material facts to investors is requiredNSI has explained
this quite elegantly. "[T]he Internet was historically administered by
entities which were involved in sponsoring research rather than by any of the
traditional federal or state regulatory agencies," but "the role of
these entities has become less clear as private parties have begun to assume
a larger role in the enhancement and maintenance of the Internets infrastructure."
NSI S-1, at 19 (Manishin Dec. Exh. 5)(emphasis added).9/
NSFs attempt to construct authority to control and restrict expansion
of the DNS from its general NSF Act powers is thus an effort to bootstrap history
into law. Yet it never even allegesbecause it cannotthat prior to
June 1997 NSF ever exercised, or asserted, the power to approve or control changes
to the Internets root server system that NSF now maintains is somehow
inherent in its NSF Act grant-making authority. Thus, history fully supports
pgMedias position that NSF lacked the authority to control expansion of
the root server DNS system. Moreover, since NSF expressly disclaims any powers
arising from prior government "ownership of the Internet," NSF Opp.
at 19, its reliance on NSFs "historical role in the Internets
development," id., provides no de facto legal authority.
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B.
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NSF Lacks Authority Under International Law
To Unilaterally Restrict Expansion of TLDs On the Internet |
NSFs response to plaintiffs international law
argument (see Pl. Mem. at 23; Perritt Dec. ¶¶ 12-48) is confused.10/
NSF contends that it has not "violated any international treaty" by
asserting control over DNS expansion. NSF Opp. at 19. Yet in the absence of
any territorial (i.e., ownership) basis for the United States to exercise
regulatory jurisdiction, the only ground for unilateral action that would
impair the sovereignty of other nations is through a multilateral international
agreement. Perritt Dec. ¶ 42. No international treaty cedes regulatory
jurisdiction over the Internet or the DNS system to the United States. NSF therefore
has it backwards, since it is the very absence of an international treaty to
legitimize its conduct that renders its "directive" inconsistent with
international law.
NSF pointedly suggests that if this Court grants antitrust relief, "that
itself would constitute an exercise of United States jurisdiction" over
the Internet. NSF Opp. at 20. The government has failed to recognize the clear
distinction between governmental regulation of the Internet itself and the imposition
of domestic legal rules on companies, like NSI, conducting commercial activities
on the Internet. See Pl. Mem. at 23. The United States has no unilateral
right to dictate to the world that TLDs can be added to the global Internet
only if the U.S. government affirmatively approves. Conversely, the United States
can certainly enforce its existing laws (including consumer protection, trademark,
privacy and other laws in addition to antitrust laws) against U.S. companies
whether or not their activities involve the Internet. Doing so is entirely permissible
under, and in fact consistent with, international law. Perritt Dec. ¶¶ 46-48.
Indeed, if the Court rules in favor of pgMedia, the requested relief cannot
interfere with the rights of other nations under international law because relief
would increase the availability of TLDs usable by citizens of every nation.
On the other hand, a decision by this Court to sanction NSFs authorityin
other words, a judgment for defendantswould conflict with international
law by providing the color of judicial authority to the unilateral restraint
by the United States on the ability of other nations to use TLDs other than
those on which NSI holds a monopoly. Thus, international law is no barrier to,
and indeed directly supports, the market-opening relief plaintiff seeks in this
litigation.
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C.
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Even If NSF Had Statutory Authority Over DNS
Expansion, NSF Made No Specific Reservation of Such Power In the Cooperative
Agreement and Has Not, In Fact, Exercised That Power |
NSF argues that it acted "in accordance with the Cooperative Agreement"
because the contract "contemplates . . . a role for NSF" in overseeing
DNS. NSF Opp. at 15. Like the governments statutory claims, however, this
contract argument relies on general provisions that say nothing about TLDs or
DNS. Moreover, the uncontested facts demonstrate that the Cooperative Agreement
requires NSI to follow not NSF or other governmental directions with respect
to TLDs, but rather those of IANA, which admittedly is not a government agency.
The new NSF assertion that the Cooperative Agreement somehow grants it the unilateral
right to step in because IANA in 1997 disclaimed legal authority over root server
administration is a pure bootstrap, supported by no precedent or contract language
whatever.
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1. |
The Cooperative Agreement Does Not Entitle NSF to Control
Either TLDs or the DNS Root Server |
Although shrouded in arcane contractual language, the NSF
position is actually quite simple. NSF argues that it has "broad leeway"
under the Cooperative Agreement because it has "general responsibility"
for domain name registrations and because the so-called "General Grant
Conditions" require written NSF approval for a "significant"
program change. NSF Opp. at 15-16. Neither of these provides any authority over
DNS, because they do not expressly include, or even by implication embrace,
management of TLDs.11/ To the contrary, as pgMedia explained
in its motion papers, the Cooperative Agreement says absolutely nothing about
DNS, and is quite clear that if "NSF does not reserve specific responsibility,"
all power is vested in NSI as the "awardee." Cooperative Agmt. Art.
VI(A)(emphasis supplied); see Pl. Mem. at 20-21. Since the contract does
not specifically reserve any DNS or TLD authority for NSF, therefore,
the plain terms of the agreement leave control in the hands of NSI. NSFs
claim that the "general conditions" constitute a "specific"
reservation of DNS responsibility is an oxymoron, NSF Opp. at 18, since by definition
a "general" condition cannot be a "specific" reservation
of responsibility.12/
A close examination of NSFs memorandum and supporting papers reveals
that its argument for Cooperative Agreement authority is like the proverbial
Emperors new clothes -- smply not there. As pgMedia explained its initial
brief, it is not disputed that the agreement cross-references certain Internet
Requests for Comments ("RFCs"), and through this mechanism requires
NSI to "follow the policy guidance of a non-governmental body, the Internet
Engineering Task Force (IETF) . . . in consultation with the Internet
Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), another non-governmental entity."
NSF Mitchell Dec. ¶ 5; Pl. Mem. at 7. In its own papers, NSF thus concedes,
as it must, that RFC 1591 requires that applications for new TLDs are "handled
by" NSI "with consultation with" IANA. NSF Opp. at 17; Strawn
Dec. ¶ 38. What the Cooperative Agreement does is cede power to NSI to
manage DNS, without any responsibility for NSF, so long as NSI "consults"
with IANA. Thus, as NSF explains, it was IANA that is empowered to approve "substantive
changes to the DNS." Strawn Dec. ¶ 38.
It is undisputed that IANA is not a government agency,13/
Pl. Rule 56.1 Statement ¶ 24, and that NSF has no contract or funding relationship
with IANA. It is also undisputed that NSI "consulted" with IANA in
March 1997, and that IANA disavowed any authority to direct NSI whether or not
to add new TLDs to the root server. Pl. Rule 56.1 Statement ¶ 35; Manishin
Dec. Exh. 11. Thus, the uncontested facts make three legal conclusions beyond
question: (a) that the only entity with any power over DNS reserved in
the Cooperative Agreement is a private entity, IANA; (b) that NSI is
required only to "consult" with IANA, but is not required to
comply with any IANA "directives" on TLD expansion; and (c) that NSF
has no role to play in DNS issues under the express terms (including the incorporated
RFCs) of the Cooperative Agreement.
These facts destroy any legitimate claim by NSF that it has
"specifically reserved" DNS authority for itself in the contract.
NSF is therefore forced to invent an entirely new claim, namely that if IANA
does not "participate" in decisions on DNS changes, NSF is empowered
to step into IANAs shoes under the Cooperative Agreement structure. NSF
Opp. at 17. Of course, there is nothing in the agreement that permits NSF to
take over responsibility from IANA, and nothing that requires "participation"
(as opposed to "consultation") by IANA in decisions on DNS expansion.
NSFs argument that this is a "significant program change" requiring
its approval, id., is make-weight. Adding TLDs to the root file is a
simple textual edit that can be performed in minutes without any disruption
to the DNS. Garrin Dec. ¶ 14. Indeed, adjusting the root file is a technical
issue -- a type of scientific judgment -- that the general conditions specifically
allow NSI to undertake unilaterally.14/ Furthermore, with
several hundred "country code" TLDs having been added to the DNS already,
the addition of more "generic" TLDs can hardly be considered a "substantial"
change in the scope of TLDs available.
Finally, NSF seeks to cloak its unsubstantiated assertion of authority in the
public interest mantle of Internet "consensus," arguing that without
IANAs "participation," NSF was required to step in to assure
that this so-called "consensus" continued to rule. NSF Opp. at 17.
"It was not the mere proposed addition of TLDs that caused NSF to act.
Rather, it was the proposed addition of TLDs without the participation of
IANA." NSF Opp. at 18 (emphasis in original). But NSF has consensus
backwards. Internet "consensus" is not an end in itself, and is certainly
not something IANA is charged either with producing or enforcing. To the contrary,
as IANA told NSI in April 1997, "the restriction in expansion of gTLDs
has thus far been due to consensus which [NSI] has chosen to accept in
refusing requests from potential registrars of new gTLDs." Manishin Dec.
Exh. 11 (emphasis added). The existence or non-existence of "consensus"
in the so-called Internet community is, accordingly, merely a convenient cover
story for the unilateral maintenance by NSI of its domain name registration
monopoly.
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2. |
NSF Has Not Exercised the Control Over DNS Expansion That
the June 1997 Directive Claims |
The NSF directive is unequivocal. NSI shall to "take NO action to create additional TLDs or to add any other new TLDs to the Internet root zone file." NSF June 25, 1997 Letter, at 1 (Manishin Dec. Exh. 13)(capitalization in original). Defendants do not contest that NSF has not rescinded or modified this directive since it was issued. Pl. Rule 56.1 Statement ¶ 51.
As pgMedia set forth in detail in its initial papers (see
Pl. Mem. at 12-13; Garrin Dec. ¶14; Manishin Dec. Exh. 18), the facts are
that NSI has "create[d] additional TLDs" and "add[ed] . . . new
TLDs to the Internet root zone file" since 1997. Pl. Rule 56.1 Statement
¶¶ 50,52. Neither defendant denies this. NSF now contends, however,
that the addition of these "country code" TLDs does not violate the
June 1997 directive because the new TLDs "have been added with IANAs
approval." NSF Opp. at 18. According to NSF, the directive was "mutually
understood" to apply only to "generic TLDs," and "was never
intended . . . to preclude the addition of country code TLDs." Strawn Dec.
¶ 55; NSF Opp. at 18. NSI contends that its DNS expansion was permissible
because the TLDs were "added by NSI at the instruction of IANA, and with
the acquiescence of the NSF." NSI Response to Plaintiffs Rule 56.1
Statement, ¶ I.15/
These attempts to rewrite the June 1997 directive in order to provide ex post facto justification for NSIs conduct are unsubstantiated, inconsistent and revealing. First, it was only after pgMedia demonstrated in its May 1998 motion papers that NSI was adding new TLDs to the root, despite the NSF directive, that defendants first even contended the directive means something other than what it says. Second, defendants cannot agree among themselves on the scope of the directive, as NSF indicates that IANA alone controls the addition of new country code TLDs, while NSI contends that NSF also must "acquiesce" in IANAs decisions. Graves Dec. ¶ 42. Third, defendants never contest pgMedias uncontradicted evidence that NSI and its commercial "preferred" partners are engaged in a joint venture to market these new country code TLDsadded to the root while plaintiffs requested TLDs have been frozen out by the directiveas "universally resolvable" generic TLDs that substitute for the ".com" domain names that are in short supply. Garrin Dec. ¶14; Manishin Dec. Exh. 17-18; Pl. Mem. at 12-13; Pl. Rule 56.1 Statement ¶¶ 53-55.
The law is settled that in deciding a summary judgment motion,
the trial judge draws all inferences from the undisputed facts in favor of the
non-moving party. Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co., 398 U.S. 144, 158-59
(1970). Here, this means that the plain language of the June 1997 directive
and the absence of any modification to that document, coupled with NSIs
resulting marketplace activities, are well more than a sufficient basis on which
to infer that the "mutual understanding" now proffered by defendants
is false. Furthermore, as NSF itself explains, in opposing summary judgment
a party is not entitled to rely on evidence that "is merely colorable,
conclusory, speculative and not significantly probative." NSF Opp. at 12,
citing Reyes v. Koehler, 815 F. Supp. 109, 112 (S.D.N.Y. 1993).
But speculation and conclusory declarations are all defendants offer. Had the
"approval" of IANA or the "acquiesce" of NSF for new TLDs
actually occurred since June 1997, at least some documentary proof of such decisions
would exist. In the absence of any such evidence, which has not been supplied
either by NSF or by NSI, the only reasonable conclusion a jury could reach from
the undisputed facts is that NSI has violated the June 1997 directive. Pl. Rule
56.1 Statement ¶ 51.16/ Consequently, defendants
new rationalizations for why the June 1997 directive does not mean what it says,
and why NSI was permitted to add new TLDs to the root while pgMedias new
TLDs have remained "frozen" for nearly 18 months, are so contrary
to the record evidence, and so lacking in probative significance, that the Court
must disregard them in ruling on plaintiffs partial summary judgment motion.
Getting to the heart of who actually has authority over the DNS and the root server continues to be a shell game, with NSI, NSF and IANA shuffling the mantle of authority from one to another as circumstances demand. When the audience was potential investors, NSI stressed in its SEC filing that the Internet is "loosely administered" and without "formal authority." Manishin Dec. Exh. 5 at 19. When the audience was pgMedia, NSI initially responded that IANA was in control. Manishin Dec. Exh. 8. In another court, NSI testified flatly that it is responsible for the "addition of all new top level domains (TLDs) on the Internet worldwide." NSI Battitsta Dec. ¶ 7 (Manishin Dec. Exh. 2). Now that the audience is this Court, NSI contradicts itself and contends that it "does not control the root zone file and does not make the decision about the inclusion or exclusion of the TLDs in that file." NSI Opp. at 3, 6.
Indeed, in congressional hearings (again when this Court was not directly involved),
the government testified that in order to ensure the Internet transition it
outlined in the Commerce Departments recent "policy statement,"
it would "seek agreement that NSI will . . . [t]urn over control
of the A root server." Written Statement of Ira C. Magaziner
before the Subcommittee on Basic Research, House Science Committee (March 31,
1998) (emphasis supplied); Manishin Dec. Exh. 3. Plainly, there would be no
need for the United States government to seek NSIs "agreement"
to "turn over control" of the root server if, as the facts of this
case refute so convincingly, NSI was merely the "custodian" of the
root. This demonstrates unequivocally that the government does not in fact enjoy
the legal power to compel NSIs actions with respect to the root server,
and thus to issue the June 1997 directive, that NSF claims in this litigation.
|
D.
|
Under Decades of Settled Antitrust Law, NSF
Has No Power to Provide Antitrust Immunity to NSI in the Absence of Express
Congressional Authorization Lacking in This Case |
Paragraph 3(c) of the Pretrial Order inquires "whether
NSI is immune from or otherwise not subject to" civil antitrust liability
under the Sherman Act.17/ NSIs narrow treatment of
antitrust immunity ignores settled antitrust precedent requiring a clear, express
and strong showing of congressional intent for an agency to bestow immunity.
Moreover, the few "federal instrumentality" decisions on which NSI
relies do not extend to essential facility cases such as this and stand only
for the unremarkable proposition that an otherwise lawful contract with the
federal government cannot be collaterally attacked as an illegal monopoly. Since
pgMedia does not challenge not NSI ".com" monopoly, but rather its
use of monopoly power over the DNS root sever to exclude competition, this case
is entirely consistent with the "federal instrumentality doctrine."
|
|
1. |
Antitrust Immunity Is Unavailable to NSI Pursuant To Any
Recognized Basis for Exemptions from Sherman Act Liability |
Settled and binding antitrust jurisprudence makes clear that implied immunity from Sherman Act liability, which is precisely what NSI claims in this case, is strongly disfavored by the federal courts. "[R]epeals of the antitrust laws by implication . . . are strongly disfavored." United States v. Philadelphia Natl Bank, 374 U.S. 321 at 350-51. A federal agencys power to bestow antitrust immunity on a private party therefore depends on whether congress has expressly delegated this power to the agency. Pl. Mem. at 19. Neither NSF nor NSI claim any such immunization power, because none exists.
NSI contends merely that because it acted pursuant to "its
Cooperative Agreement with NSF," NSI Opp. at 23, it is perforce shielded
from judicial antitrust scrutiny. That is simply not the case. First, even if
this were correct as a factual matter, nothing in the NSF Act or any other statute
governing NSFs powers grants the agency any authority to immunize private
parties, including funding recipients or contractees, from antitrust liability.
Pl. Mem. at 19-23. Second, although both NSF and NSI rely on the purported "public
purpose" of domain registrationslanguage taken directly from the
Federal Grant and Cooperative Agreement Actcongressional authorization
of "cooperative" agreements contains nothing overriding operation
of the antitrust laws. See 31 U.S.C. § 5301 et seq. There
are numerous statutes that provide immunities or exemptions from the antitrust
laws. For instance, the Bank Merger Act of 1966, 12 U.S.C. § 1828(c)(5)(B),
expressly permits federal banking agencies to "approve" bank mergers
that would otherwise violate the antitrust laws if they make certain public
interest findings, and the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1971, 15 U.S.C. § 1291,
authorized the NFL and AFL to merge without antitrust restraint.18/
Had Congress similarly intended cooperative agreements under the Grant Act,
such as the NSF-NSI contract, to have any antitrust immunity consequences, it
would (and needs to) have said so expressly.
Third, NSI never deals with the Second Circuits long
line of cases, affirmed on the merits by the Supreme Court, in which private
entities, like the New York Stock Exchange, have been accorded limited implied
immunity by courts, without express congressional authorization. As pgMedia
explained (Pl. Mem. at 20-21), only where there is a comprehensive regulatory
regime that is "plainly repugnant" to the antitrust laws is implied
immunity appropriate. Gordon v. New York Stock Exchange, 422 U.S. 659
(1975); Silver v. New York Stock Exchange, 373 U.S. 341 (1963). Under
this Second Circuit-originated rule, implied antitrust immunity is found only
where there is a "pervasive regulatory scheme," where an antitrust
exemption is "necessary to make the [statute] work," and "even
then only to the minimum extent necessary." Strobl v. New York Mercantile
Exchange, 768 F.2d 22, 26 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 474 U.S. 1006
(1985). This predicate for a claim of implied immunity is clearly absent because,
as both NSF and NSI admit, "NSF does not regulate NSI." NSF Mitchell
Dec. ¶ 3; NSI S-1 at 12 (NSI not subject to regulation); Pl. Rule 56.1
Statement ¶ 18.19/
Recognizing that it cannot possibly meet the Strobl test for implied immunity, NSI therefore is forced to argue, without any authority, that Strobl "deal[s] with an entirely different kind of antitrust immunity." NSI Opp. at 25. But under this approach, private entities would be automatically immune from antitrust liability merely because they had contracted with the federal government (or a federal "instrumentality"), without meeting the high burden imposed by Strobl for judicial extension of implied immunity. Government contractors would receive blanket antitrust immunity merely as a result of the contracting process, without any requirement for "pervasive" governmental regulation. The enormous legal consequences of this radical development, completely ignored by NSI, are that private parties operating under federal contract would receive greater antitrust immunity than sovereign states and their political subdivisions. It is no answer, as NSI asserts, that the Cooperative Agreement carries out a public purpose, NSI Opp. at 24, 26, because the "public purpose" provisions of the Grant Act (31 U.S.C. § 6305) and the NSF Act (42 U.S.C. § 1862(g)) do not convey any power to extend antitrust immunity.
Indeed, federal government contracts have never had such a preclusive effect. As pgMedia demonstrated, Pl. Mem. at 21, the seminal "essential facilities" case holds squarely that "government contracting officers do not have the power to grant immunity from the Sherman Act." Otter Tail Power Co. v. United States, 410 U.S. 366, 378-79 (1973); United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., 310 U.S. 150, 225-27 (1940)("Though employees of the government may have known of these programs and winked at them or tacitly approved them, no immunity would thereby have been obtained."). NSIs attempt to fashion a new line of implied immunity based on contracts with the federal government is unavailing, because it would effectively overrule Otter Tail, as well as Silver, Socony-Vacuum and Strobl.
NSIs answer to Otter Tail is, once again, that the purported "public
purpose" of Internet domain registrations is "the source of NSIs
antitrust immunity." NSI Opp. at 28. That is simply wrong. There is no
more public purpose in Internet communications than there was in the provision
of electricity in Otter Tail. Furthermore, all of the regulated industries
(securities, telecommunications, banking, etc.) governed by the Strobl
tests of "pervasive regulation" and "plain repugnancy" also
perform public purposes, and are often regulated by "public service"
commissionsyet the antitrust laws can and do apply. Finally, in Otter
Tail the defendant utility in fact operated under a federal government contract,
issued by the Bureau of Reclamation, that required certain "wheeling"
of electric services. 410 U.S. at 410-11. Had such a contract been sufficient
to shield the utility from antitrust liability, the Supreme Court would never
had reached the merits of the antitrust claims in Otter Tail to find
that the utilitys refusal to "wheel" with other competitors
was a violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act.
|
|
2. |
The So-Called "Federal Instrumentality Doctrine,"
Even if Valid, Is Inapplicable to Section 2 Cases Challenging Use of Monopoly
Power Rather Than the Contract Establishing a Monopoly Franchise |
NSIs claim that its root server functions are immune
under what it terms the "federal instrumentality doctrine" is an improper
extension of cases, not binding in this Circuit, that actually stand for a quite
unremarkable proposition. Only seven cases (one decided after plaintiffs
motion was filed) appear ever relied on this so-called doctrine, and all of
these reflect a common situation that is not present in this litigation.20/
In each of these cases, a federal agency or federally-created entity (e.g.,
a federal territory or public corporation) contracted with a third-party private
entity to exclusively perform a service (such as public telephone service),
and a resulting antitrust challenge to the contract as an unlawful agreement
or conspiracy to monopolize was rejected.
For instance, in IT&E Overseas, Inc. v. RCA Global Communications, Inc., 747 F. Supp. 6, 11 14 (D.D.C. 1990), a federal entity (Guam Telephone Authority) granted an exclusive telephone franchise to RCA Global Communications. The court held that because the federal instrumentality was immune from antitrust suit, the contract granting a monopoly was equally immune. In Sea Air Shuttle Corp. v. Virgin Islands Port Auth., 782 F. Supp. 1070 (D.V.I. 1991), another federal entity entered into a monopoly contract to manage and operate sea plane ramps, which the court held to be immune from antitrust challenge. And in Thomas, plaintiffs alleged that the Cooperative Agreement between NSI and NSF was an unlawful conspiracy to monopolize. The court concluded, correctly, that a private antitrust plaintiff cannot challenge a governmental contract as an unlawful Section 1 agreement.
Each of the other "federal instrumentality" cases
is in accord.21/ The Seventh Circuit has explained that
"[i]f a particular purchase is exempt from liability under the antitrust
laws, both the seller and the purchaser in the transaction are exempt."
Champaign-Urbana, 632 F.2d at 693 (exclusive contract to provide books
and magazines to Army and Air Force Exchange Services). This is entirely consistent
with the Supreme Courts decision, in City of Columbia v. Omni Outdoor
Advertising, Inc., 499 U.S. 365, 382 (1991), that there is no exception
to governmental immunity "when government officials conspire with a private
party to employ government action as a means of stifling competition."
What is unusual in this case is that NSI seeks to extend
this simple principle beyond the government monopoly contract itself to immunize
a defendants anticompetitive use of the monopoly power granted by the
government. None of the decided cases immunizes the use of a government-granted
monopoly franchise against competitors in a manner that would otherwise violate
Section 2 of the Sherman Act.22/ Thus, to the extent any
"federal instrumentality doctrine" exists,23/
it does not provide blanket antitrust immunity to a party entering into a government
contract. The law is settled that a monopoly, however lawfully acquired, may
not be maintained or used in an anticompetitive manner. United States v.
Grinnell Corp., 384 U.S. 563, 570-71 (1966); Aspen Skiing Co. v. Aspen
Highlands Skiing Corp., 472 U.S. 585 (1985). Just as the NFL can be subject
to liability for monopolization despite statutory immunity for the formation
of its monopoly, United States Football League v. NFL, 842 F.2d 1335
(2d Cir. 1988), and just as AT&T was not immune from Section 2 liability
for refusing to allow competitors to deal with its lawful local telephone monopolies,
United States v. AT&T, 524 F, Supp. 1356 (D.D.C. 1981)(denying motion
to dismiss after close of governments case-in-chief), so too can
NSI be liable for exclusionary use of its government-sanctioned monopoly to
refuse to deal with competitors. As pgMedia has made clear from the outset of
this litigation, "[p]aintiff challenges only NSIs use of its market
power to refuse to deal with competitors, not the legality of NSIs monopoly
in the first instance." Pl. Mem. at 2.
In short, unlike the plaintiffs in Thomas and in Beverly, pgMedia is not challenging the lawfulness of the Cooperative Agreement. See Beverly, slip op. at 8 ("Beverly also contends that . . . the Cooperative Agreement creates a monopoly.") NSI was granted the exclusive right to register ".com" domains under that contract, and the antitrust claims in this case do not relate to NSIs ".com" monopoly. Rather, as a result of the Cooperative Agreement, NSI also has control of the Internet root zone server, and has refused to deal with pgMedia for TLD access to that essential facility. Under the settled principles discussed above, if NSI acts to "maintain" or "use" its lawful monopoly power in an exclusionary manner, for instance by refusing to deal with competitors, there is not and can be no antitrust immunity.
Even if it were inclined to accept NSIs unprecedented extension of these
federal instrumentality cases, this Court must still address the fact that Strobl
is the law of this Circuit. If NSI is correct that the federal instrumentality
doctrine is a completely separate line of authority from the "pervasive
regulation" immunity cases, then it is clear that the Second Circuit has
not yet adopted that view. Under Strobl, implied immunity cannot be found
unless a "plain repugnancy" between regulation and antitrust exists.
If a court in this jurisdiction is to adopt, and extend, the cases proffered
by NSIand thus create a new form of implied antitrust immunity in the
Second Circuitsuch a decision should properly come from the court of appeals.
|
|
3. |
NSIs "Antitrust Standing"
Argument is Not Ripe for Decision and Merely Reiterates Its Immunity Claims |
NSI contends that pgMedia has suffered no antitrust injury because "[i]t was NSFnot NSIthat made the decision to add no new gTLDs to the root zone file; and it was the NSF that directed NSI to comply with that direction." NSI Opp. at 28. According to NSI, because pgMedias injury was caused by NSF, and not as a "direct result of any business decision by NSI to refuse to deal, " pgMedia has not suffered an "antitrust injury" as required under Brunswick Corp. v. Pueblo Bowl-O-Mat, Inc., 429 U.S. 477, 489 (1977).
This argument is defective for two reasons. First, the Pretrial Order sought briefing only on whether NSI was "immune from or otherwise not subject to antitrust liability," not on whether pgMedia has standing. Standing is not a question either of the scope of or immunity from antitrust, but rather a plaintiffs ability to bring a claim. If NSI has any legitimate issues as to pgMedias standing, therefore, they cannot be decided in the context of the present cross-motion, since all motions were confined to the three specific issues set forth in the Pretrial Order.
Second, NSIs antitrust injury argument is simply a recast of its antitrust immunity argument. Both are based on the (assumed) power of NSF to direct and control the Internet root server. Both are inconsistent with the uncontested facts that NSI has added new TLDs despite NSFs directive "to take NO action to create additional TLDs or to add any other new TLDs to the Internet root zone file." Both assume, improperly on summary judgment, that the Court must accept NSIs factual assertions in the face of the evidence (and inferences) relied on by pgMedia for proof that NSI has a substantial degree of commercial discretion, unconstrained by NSF, in deciding whether and when to add new TLDs to the root server. Therefore, as a matter of both fact and law, summary judgment for NSI on antitrust standing grounds is inappropriate.
NSIs standing theory is also nonsensical. Because "antitrust injury"
is a standing issue, courts are required to address it before engaging in substantive
antitrust analysis on the merits, including the question of antitrust immunity.
Had NSIs theory been applied to the "federal instrumentality"
cases, therefore, none of them would have reached the question of immunity,
as they would have been dismissed procedurally on standing grounds. Likewise,
in Socony-Vacuum and Otter Tail, the Supreme Court reached the
merits despite defendants claims that they were acting in compliance with
some government purpose or edict. 310 U.S. 150; 410 U.S. 366. Thus, if pgMedia
lacks standing, so too did the plaintiffs in Thomas, which means that
under NSIs view of standing, the very merits decisions NSI relies on should
never have been issued.
II. |
NSFS "DIRECTIVE" CONSTITUTES
AN UNLAWFUL PRIOR RESTRAINT OF CONSTITUTIONALLY PROTECTED SPEECH |
Assuming that NSI is immune from antitrust liability, the Court is required
to decide the final claim in Count VI, namely whether NSFs directive not
to add new Internet TLDs, as governmental action, violates the First Amendment
as a prior restraint of protected expression. The Supreme Court has squarely
held that Internet speech is entitled to heightened First Amendment scrutiny.
Reno v. ACLU, 117 S. Ct. 2329 (1976). Nonetheless, NSF inexplicably fails
to discuss Reno in its opposition, instead contending that that its TLD
ban is merely a content-neutral "time, place and manner" restriction,
NSF Opp. at 32, and that domain names are unprotected commercial speech, id.
at 22-23. Neither of these arguments is correct.
|
A.
|
pgMedia Has Standing to Challenge NSFs
Actions on First Amendment Overbreadth Grounds |
NSF argues that pgMedia lacks standing to challenge the TLD ban because plaintiff is asserting third-party First Amendment rights and because no "overbreadth" challenge is permissible for purportedly "commercial" speech. NSF Opp. at 21-23. NSF is incorrect because: (1) pgMedias own TLDs have been banned by NSF; (2) pgMedia as an editor of Internet content is asserting its own right to free speech, not that of third parties; and (3) even commercial speakers have standing to make overbreadth First Amendment challenges to governmental restraints.
Although NSF is correct that pgMedia is asserting the rights of its customers to use second-level domains that do not end in ".com," ".net" or ".org," plaintiff is also asserting its own First Amendment rights. Plaintiff is currently using more than 20 different TLDs for its own services and Web sites, including "name.space" (its business trademark), "pgmedia.inc," "trusted.host," "free.zone" and others. Because NSF has refused to permit these TLDs to be universally resolvable by addition to the root server system, pgMedia is presently forced to use the URL "namespace.pgmedia.net" in lieu of these domain names. Indeed, NSF recognizes expressly that "name.space" is one of the domain names pgMedia is trying to use on the Internet today. NSF Opp. at 24.
These facts are more than sufficient to show that pgMedia is asserting its own First Amendment rights, as well as those of its customers. NSFs belief that the difference between ".com" and other TLDs "does not appreciably limit" pgMedias speech, NSF Opp. at 25, is constitutionally immaterial. Forcing plaintiff to use "namespace.pgmedia.net" instead of "name.space" is governmentally compelled speech. That is to say, the domain name that pgMedia is required to use includes information that is properly a private matter and that it would otherwise not include. Compelled speech is just as violative of the First Amendment as suppressed speech. Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo, 418 U.S. 241, 258 (1974).
Furthermore, despite NSFs claims to the contrary, there
is no real dispute that plaintiff acts in an editorial fashion in publishing
domain names for itself and its customers. Nowhere has pgMedia "conceded"
(NSF Opp. at 21) that it serves no editorial function in its registration of
domain names; rather, pgMedia is asserting the same publishing rights that NSI
invokes every day.24/ Indeed, the Supreme Court characterizes
the Internet as a newspaper compiled by "publishers" of Internet content.25/
These publishers, including pgMedia, warrant the same First Amendment
protection as any other. See Reno, 117 S. Ct. at 2346. This protection
was granted in Bigelow v. Virginia, 421 U.S. 811, 815 (1975), where the
Supreme Court gave standing to newspapers editors to challenge a statute prohibiting
publications that may encourage abortion, "the injury of which appellant
complain[ed] is one to him as an editor and publisher of a newspaper; he [was]
not seeking to raise the hypothetical rights of others." As a publisher
in a medium that the Court has directly analogized to newspapers, plaintiff
therefore has standing in its own right to seek redress for NSFs suppression
of speech.
Finally, NSFs intimations notwithstanding, NSF Opp.
at 22-23, the commercial element of domain names does not eliminate pgMedias
standing to assert a First Amendment overbreadth claim. As the Court explained
in Metromedia v. City of San Diego, 453 U.S. 490 (1981), it has "never
held that one with a commercial interest in speech also cannot challenge
the facial validity of a statute on grounds of its substantial infringement
of the First Amendment of others." 453 U.S . at 504 n.11. The fact that
the Internet has a "commercial tilt," NSF Opp. at 23, does not serve
to diminish the importance of the content it transmits.26/
In Metromedia, the Court held that commercial billboard owners retain
First Amendment protection in the speech they sell to their customers. 453 U.S.
at 515. If a billboard owner can assert third-party First Amendment rights,
so too can pgMedia.
|
B.
|
NSF Misconstrues Its Prior Restraint of Speech
as a Content-Neutral Time, Place and Manner Restriction |
NSF claims that forcing pgMedia to add content to its communicative
domain names is a permissible "time, place, and manner" restriction.
NSF Opp. at 26-28.27/ It argues that because "the NSF
directive permits the speech cited by plaintiff to be expressed in any domain
space other than the TLD," pgMedia has suffered a "de minimis"
burden. NSF Opp. at 25-26. This argument fundamentally mischaracterizes the
nature and propriety of time, place and manner restrictions.
Time, place and manner restrictions occur when a government authority seeks to alter the location, time or volume at which speech is communicated. For example, in Ward, the case upon which NSF principally relies (NSF Opp. at 27- 29, 31), the Supreme Court upheld a New York city ordinance requiring that bands performing in Central Park use the citys own sound equipment in order to decrease noise pollution. The stage "was open, apparently, to all performers," and only their volume was regulated, with no change in the content of the songs performed. 491 U.S. at 790. NSF also relies on Frisby v. Schultz, 487 U.S. 474, 483 (1988), which upheld a municipal ordinance banning "picketing taking place solely in front of a particular residence."
These cases are entirely unrelated to the present claim, for NSFs ban
on pgMedias TLDs has excluded it from the public domain name "stage"
unless it fundamentally changes its content. pgMedia and its customers are not
permitted to speak at all unless they use the precise ".com," ".net"
and ".org" formulations permitted by the government. Legitimate time,
place and manner restrictions cannot require alteration of the content of communication,
but rather only its method, location and timing. By banning all speech using
"alternative" TLDs, the government is dictating what Internet speakers
can communicate in the DNS "domain space," not merely how and when
they can speak. Thus, although it is correct that NSF has not specifically "targeted"
plaintiffs TLDs, NSF Opp. at 27, it is not correct that the NSF ban is
content-neutral, because by its very terms it precludes all use of TLDs as communicative
messages unless they meet the governments ad hoc rules for the content
of TLDs.
|
C.
|
NSF Cannot Survive the Heightened Constitutional
Scrutiny Reserved for Internet Speech |
NSF argues that pgMedia has "not met his [sic] burden of demonstrating that domain names constitute protected speech," NSF at 23-24, and incorrectly insists that domain names have only the functionality of phone numbers. Id. Although NSF disagrees, NSF Opp. at 24, plaintiff believes it is clear that domain names can and do constitute protected speech when embodying a communicative message. Planned Parenthood Fed. of Am. v. Bucci, No. 97 Civ. 0629, 1997 LEXIS 3338, *34 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 19, 1997), affd mem., 1998 WL 336163 (2d Cir. Feb. 9, 1998). pgMedias domain names, including "for.mayor" and "microsoft.free.zone," undoubtedly evince the "expressive purpose" that the Second Circuit has required of a communicative message. United We Stand America v. United We Stand, America New York, 128 F.3d 86, 92 (2d Cir. 1997); see Pl. Mem. at 24. Thus, pgMedia has amply satisfied its burden of showing that its speech warrants First Amendment protection.
The burden therefore shifts to the government to prove that its prior restraint of pgMedias protected speech survives constitutional scrutiny. Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence, 468 U.S. 288, 293 n.5 (1984).("it is common to place the burden upon the Government to justify impingements on First Amendment interests"). NSF cannot meet this burden, because its stated concern that the addition of new TLDs to the root file will endanger the "stable transition of the domain name system," NSF Opp. at 28, cannot compare to the rare situationsclear and immediate threats to national securityin which the Court has upheld prior restraints of speech. Pl. Mem. at 24. That is why NSF has sought to shoe-horn its actions into the inapplicable category of "time, place and manner" restrictions, because there is simply no way that these purported governmental interests, even if valid (pgMedia has contested each of them in its initial memoranda and declarations), are sufficiently grave to justify the extreme measure of a prior restraint.
Most significantly, NSF fails to address, perhaps because
it cannot distinguish, the Supreme Courts requirement in Reno that
all restrictions of Internet speech be based on a compelling government interest
and achieved through narrowly tailored means. Reno, 117 S. Ct. at 2346.
NSFs repeated allusions to the "destabilization" of the Internet,
NSF Opp. at 28, and "time-consuming and less efficient" operation
of the Internet, NSF Opp. at 31, are characterized by NSF itself as "large"
and "significant," NSF Opp. at 28, but the government pointedly refrains
from asserting that these interests are "compelling." Indeed, and
again without reference to Reno, NSF states affirmatively that it is
not required to show such a compelling interest. But it is and it has not done
so.28/
II. |
NSFS REQUEST FOR A STAY IS INAPPROPRIATE
BECAUSE THERE IS NO ASSURANCE THAT THE "NEW CORPORATION" WILL
PROMPTLY RESOLVE THE ISSUES OF DNS EXPANSION THAT THE GOVERNMENT HAS REFUSED
TO DECIDE FOR THE PAST 18 MONTHS |
NSF urges the Court to "stay this matter in anticipation
of its becoming moot," relying on a single district court decision. Region
8 Forest Serv. Timber Purchasers Council v. Alcock, 736 F. Supp. 267, 274
(N.D. Ga. 1990)("a court may stay a proceeding in anticipation that it
will shortly become moot."); NSF Opp. at 11. A stay of this proceeding
would, however, be a critical error because there is no reasonable basis to
conclude that the Governments recent policy statement concerning the transition
of the DNS will redress NSIs refusal to deal with plaintiff.29/
NSF correctly reports that "the Government has made plain its intent to transfer to a private, not-for-profit entity the management of DNSincluding the authority to add any new gTLDs." NSF Opp. at 11. On this basis, NSF asserts that once this private entity has assumed management control of the DNS, "plaintiffs case may become moot if the private entity decides to add new gTLDs, and in so doing provides plaintiff the relief sought herein." NSF Opp. at 11 (emphasis added).
There are several obvious flaws in this analysis.
- As noted in the Preliminary Statement, supra p. 1, the governments
policy statement is not binding because it "does not itself have the
force and effect of law." 63 Fed. at 31,748. Thus, the policy statement
provides no mandate that the transfer of management must occur; there is simply
no legal requirement that NSI relinquish control of the Internet root server
at all, let alone at a date certain in the near future.
- NSF cites the governments recent announcement that it "hopes
that the private sector can get the new corporation up and running by October
1 of this year." NSF Opp. at 11 (emphasis added). Yet the government
projects that the new corporation "will [not] assume full responsibility"
for the Internet until "October 1 of the year 2000 at the outside."30/
Therefore, although the Government has targeted the transition to occur on
September 30, 1998 when the NSI contract with NSF expires, it recognizes that
the transition may not occur for several years, if at all.
- NSF concedes that if management of the DNS comes under new control, competition
will only emerge in the assignment of TLDs if the new corporation decides
to add new gTLDs. NSF Opp. at 11 ("plaintiffs case may become moot
if the private entity decides to add new gTLDs") (emphasis added). NSF
provides no assurance because there can be nonethat the new corporation
will, in fact, decide to add new gTLDs. Absent a judicial decree ordering
access to the root zone file, there is simply no guarantee that management
under another entity will allow access to the root zone file in any reasonable
period of time.
Most significantly, the government has once again used its "policy" process in an effort to delay and derail this Courts antitrust jurisdiction. As noted above, pgMedia filed this action before any consideration of Internet DNS "policy" had been initiated by the Commerce Department. Now, having at long last concluded that process, and having declined to assert in its "policy statement" the very legal authority NSF argues to this Court, the government wants the Court to defer legal decision because the government itself has been unwilling, or unable, to decide these questions. The one thing that is clear is that the United States government had a unique opportunity to "moot" this caseat least for portions of plaintiffs requested injunctive reliefif it would have decided to open the DNS to new TLDs, including some or all of pgMedias. Instead, the Commerce Department "punted," leaving all issues undecided and shifting responsibility from IANA to yet another non-governmental body.
In its May 15, 1998 motion and at the May 27, 1998 status conference, pgMedia made very clear that it has suffered and continues to suffer irreparable injury from being excluded from the domain name registration market. While we are sympathetic with the procedural safeguards identified in the policy statement for an open, international, representative organization to control DNS and the root server, that does not diminish that fact that, as the first real competitor to NSI at the gTLD level, pgMedia has already been frozen out of the market for nearly 18 months. Since there is no realistic likelihood that the new corporation will be organized, and actually open new TLDs, in any reasonable period of time, NSFs motion for stay should be denied. Only if this Court is willing to provide a clear, prompt "deadline" for the addition of new TLDs to the Internet root server system should it even consider a temporary stay of its decisions on the antitrust immunity and First Amendment questions presented on the pending cross-motions.
CONCLUSION
For al the foregoing reasons, the Court should enter partial
summary judgment for plaintiff on Count VI of the Second Amended Complaint,
deny defendants cross-motions for summary judgment, and deny NSFs
motion for stay.
|
Respectfully
submitted,
|
|
BLUMENFELD
& COHEN
|
|
|
Of Counsel: |
By: Glenn B. Manishin /s/ |
PAUL, WEISS,
RIFKIND, WHARTON |
Gary
M. Cohen (GC-1145) |
& GARRISON |
Glenn
B. Manishin (GM-5135) |
Daniel J. Leffell
(DL-6803)
|
1615 M Street, N.W., Suite 700
|
1285 Avenue of
the Americas |
Washington, D.C.
20036 |
New York, New
York 10019 |
202-955-6300
(ph) |
212-373-3000
(ph) |
202-955-6460
(fax) |
212-373-2628
(fax) |
|
|
Attorneys for Plaintiff pgMedia, Inc.
|
Dated: July 16, 1998
FOOTNOTES
1/
NSIs Memorandum in Support of Cross-Motion for Summary Judgement and Opposition
to Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgement (July 2, 1998)("NSI Opp.");
NSFs Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Plaintiffs Partial Summary
Judgement Motion and in Support of NSFs Cross-Motions for a Stay or for
Summary Judgement (July 2, 1998)("NSF Opp")
2/Under
the June 1 Pretrial Order, plaintiffs pending motion for preliminary injunction,
as supplemented by Plaintiffs Rule 56.1 Statement (filed June 2, 1998),
"is deemed to be a motion for partial summary judgment pursuant to Fed.
R. Civ. P. 56 on Count VI of the Second Amended Complaint." Count VI alleges
that NSF lacked the power to issue the June 1997 "directive" to NSI,
that the directive is insufficient to immunize defendant NSF from liability
under Section 2 of the Sherman Act, and that, if NSF has power to confer such
immunity, its actions in restricting new TLDs amount to an unconstitutional
restraint on plaintiffs rights under the First Amendment.
3/Department
of Commerce, Management of Internet Names and Addresses, General Statement
of Policy, 63 Fed. Reg. 31,741 (June 10, 1998)("Policy Statement").
4/"NSI
received written instruction from NSF on October 2, 1997 to accept direction
only from the NSF under the Cooperative Agreement relative to management of
the A root server. Some operators of other root servers do not acknowledge
the NSFs authority. NSI recommends that the U.S. government publicly
assert its authority over the root zone system in the final version of the Green
Paper." NSI 1998 DNS Comments (Manishin Dec. Exh. 7) at 3 (emphasis
supplied).
5/
Moreover, whether or not the facts support entry of partial summary judgment
for pgMedia, they clearly do not support grant of summary judgment for defendants
on the antitrust claim. For instance, NSF asserts that the Cooperative Agreement
permits it to assert control over the Internet root because IANA refused to
"consult" with NSI. NSF Opp. at 17; Strawn Dec. ¶ 46-47. Yet
as discussed below, there is no language in the Cooperative Agreement providing
such power to NSF, and the contract itself provides that all powers are vested
in NSI unless "specifically reserved" by NSF. See infra at
pp. 11-14. Accordingly, because a court on summary judgment must draw all inferences
from the evidence in favor of the non-moving party and must deny summary judgment
if a reasonable jury could find in favor of the non-moving party, Anderson
v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 277 U.S. 242 (1986), on the predicate issue of NSFs
authority, the Court is not permitted on this record to rule in favor of defendants.
6/
Although the questions related to NSFs legal authority are obviously related,
neither defendant addresses both issues. NSI briefs only the issue of antitrust
immunity, assuming without discussion that NSF has authority to control addition
of new TLDs to the root; indeed NSI maintains that NSFs authority to issue
the June 1997 directive does not "relate[] to the antitrust claims"
asserted against NSI. NSI Rule 56.1 Statement at 1. Conversely, while NSF asserts
that it has authority to issue the directive, NSF Opp. At 12-21, the government
does not even argue that the directive provides any immunity or other legal
defense to NSI. Id.
7/
This concession is fatal to NSFs argument that the NSF Acts "necessary
and proper" clause provides statutory authority for its directives in this
case. NSF Opp. at 13. Since it is uncontested that NSF has no "mandate"
to support DNS, Pl. Mem. at 6, control of DNS is not necessary for NSF to "translate
its statutory mandate into action." NSF Opp. at 13. While 47 U.S.C. §
1870(c) certainly permits the issuance of contracts, if NSF is not required
to support domain name registrations, it is impossible to conclude that DNS
regulation is a "necessary" activity for the agency. But in any event,
the broad language of this implementing provision cannot be interpreted to provide
the specific regulatory power NSF now asserts, or else the grant by Congress
of agency power to distribute funds would suddenly be transformed into the power
to engage in substantive regulation of economic activity. Had Congress intended
to authorize NSF to regulate the Internets DNS and root server systems,
a more specific indication than a catch-all "necessary and proper"
clause is required.
8/
The fact that the Cooperative Agreement contemplates "substantial involvement"
by the government is not relevant, NSF Opp. at 14, because the Grant Acts
language does nothing to confer any substantive regulatory powers on the government
agency entering into such a contract. The High Performance Computing Act of
1991, 15 U.S.C. § 5501 et seq., is also immaterial. NSF Opp.
at 13. This statute authorizes NSF to "provide . . . infrastructure support"
for "all science and engineering disciplines," and to "support
basic research . . . in all aspects of high-performance computing and advanced
high-speed computer networking." 15 U.S.C. § 5521(a)(1). In addition,
the Act charges NSF with assisting colleges, universities and libraries as a
primary source of information about access to computer networking. Id.
§ 5521 (a)(2)-(3). These general mandates plainly do not imply any power
to regulate, control or restrict DNS.
9/
Under Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2), these NSI SEC filings are admissions by a party
opponent that are admissible on the merits, and therefore must be treated as
uncontested facts for purposes of summary judgment under Fed. R. Civ. P. 56.
See Pl. Rule 56.1 Statement, ¶¶ 2-4
10/
NSF first states that in ordering no new TLDs to be added to the root server,
it is not exercising "prescriptive jurisdiction" over these global
resources, but rather only "enter[ing] into an agreement with a corporation."
NSF Opp. at 19-20. Yet it cannot be denied that TLDs are used worldwide and
are not subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of any one nation. See
Perritt Dec. ¶¶ 20-22. Thus, NSF is plainly asserting the power to
"prescribe" rules for addition of new TLDs that impact international
resources.
Second, NSF acknowledges that it has not
sanctioned a monopoly over TLDs, NSF Opp. at 21, citing in support the governments
"policy" decision to permit, at some time in the future, a new private
organization to decide issues related to possible TLD expansion. NSF Opp. at
21. Of course, the fact that the United States government may, months or years
from now, eliminate the monopoly does not detract from the undisputed fact that,
since June 1997, NSFs directive has had the purpose and effect of preventing
pgMedia (and any others) from competing with NSI for domain name registrations.
Whether the monopoly may some day be eliminated obviously does detract from
the fact that the monopoly is operational today and is being aggressively
maintained and expanded by NSI.
11/
NSF relies on Article VI(B)(1) of the Cooperative Agreement, which grants NSF
the responsibility for "support, support planning, oversight, monitoring
and evaluation," and approving NSIs annual report, program plan and
budget. NSF Opp. at 15. What NSF fails to mention however, is that the immediately
preceding paragraph of Article VI provides that "[a]wardee [NSI] has primary
responsibility for ensuring the quality, timeliness and effective management
of the registration services provided under this agreement." Coop. Agmt.
Art. VI(B); Strawn Dec., Exh 4 (emphasis added).
12/
NSI asserts that the Cooperative Agreement requires mere "custodial administration"
of the root zone file. NSI Opp. at 12. Yet NSI cites no provision of the contract
in support of this assertion, and the language from the NSI proposal, incorporated
by reference into the Cooperative Agreement, does not provide that "NSIs
role as Internet Registry is only that of day-to-day administrator." Id.
at 13. In any event, pgMedia has introduced documentary and affidavit evidence
attesting to NSIs exclusive control of the root zone server Garrin Dec.
¶14; Pl. Rule 56.1 Statement ¶16. NSIs conclusory assertion
to the contrary is insufficient to withstand summary judgment under Rule 56.
Reyes v. Koehler, 815 F. Supp. 109, 112 (S.D.N.Y. 1993).
13/
Pl. Mem. at 7 & n.7 "[A]s all Internet insiders know, IANA is a small
group of people [at USC],. . . [and] IANA policy is essentially defined by Jon
Postel, one of the Internets great pioneers." R. Shaw, "Internet
Domain Names: Whose Domain Is This?," in Coordinating the Internet
107, 116 (B. Kahin. & J. Keller eds. 1997).
14/
"Although the grantee is encouraged to seek the advice and opinion of the
Foundation on special problems that may arise, such advice does not diminish
the grantees responsibility for making sound scientific and administrative
judgments and should not imply that the responsibility for operating decisions
has shifted to the Foundation." General Grant Conditions, NSI Exh. 5, at
1a.
15/
NSI claims that the NSFs June 25, 1997 letter instructs NSI to "take
NO action to create or add new TLDs unless instructed by the NSF."
NSI Rule 56.1 Statement ¶ 15; NSI Opp. at 4 (emphasis added). But the directive
itself (quoted in full in the text) contains no such caveat. Furthermore, NSI
itself is internally inconsistent, as it elsewhere contends this DNS expansion
was permissible because the TLDs were "added by NSI at the instruction
of IANA, and with the acquiescence of the NSF." NSI Response to Plaintiffs
Rule 56.1 Statement, ¶ I. Except for the conclusory assertions of the NSI
Grave Declaration, which provides no documentation of any IANA "instruction"
or NSF "acquiescence," NSI offers no proof of this purported fact.
Plaintiff believes that the language of the June 1997 directive is plain and
indisputable, and cannot be contradicted by unsubstantiated testimony. However,
under the settled Rule 56 requirement that all evidence (and inferences) is
to be construed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, the most
that NSIs assertions do is create a triable issue of fact, thus precluding
grant of its cross-motion for summary judgment. In contrast, pgMedia need not
prevail on the issue of NSFs authority in order to be entitled to partial
summary judgment on its motion, because even if the NSF directive only applies
to the TLDs plaintiff has requested, NSI still enjoys no antitrust immunity
regardless of NSFs "directions."
16/
Under Rule 56, evidence relied on by a party in support of or in opposition
to summary judgment must satisfy admissibility requirements. FRCP 56(e): see
also Adickes, 398 U.S. at 159 n.19. The NSI Graves Declaration
contends that NSI has added new country code TLDs only with the "approval"
of IANA. Graves Dec. ¶ 33. The only way such "approval" can have
been transmitted is through the statements (oral or written) of IANA. Since
IANA is not before the Court, these out-of-court statements cannot be offered
to prove their truth without violating the basic evidentiary rule prohibition
on hearsay. Fed. R. Evid. 801. Accordingly, as an evidentiary matter the June
1996 directive is uncontradicted, NSIs opposition to Plaintiffs
Rule 56.1 Statement is based on incompetent evidence, and the Court must grant
partial summary judgment for pgMedia on the issue of NSFs authority to
issue the directive.
17/
This Court does not need to reach the immunity question in light of the terms
of the Cooperative Agreement, which at most require NSF to accede to the instructions
of IANA as to TLD expansion. Supra at pp. 11-13 Because there is no dispute
that IANA is a "non-governmental entity," Pl. Rule 56.1 Statement
¶ 23, any "directions" or "consultations" received
from IANA are private conduct, which obviously can provide no antitrust shield
for NSI. To the extent NSF claims power to "take over" for IANA, it
therefore acts not as the government, but rather steps into the shoes of IANA
for purposes of the Cooperative Agreement.
18/
2 Antitrust Law Developments (Fourth) at 1234, 1316 (1997). Of course, courts
"have expressly held that abuse of monopoly power acquired as a result
of the [football merger] legislation is not exempt," id. at 1317, such
that the NFL has been sued, successfully, for monopolization. United States
Football League v, NFL, 842 F.2d 1335 (2d Cir. 1988). Other examples of
express antitrust immunity abound, for instance the labor and agriculture exemption
in the Clayton Act ("Nothing contained in the antitrust laws shall be construed
to forbid the existence and operation of . . . labor, agricultural, or horticultural
. . . organizations, instituted for the purpose of mutual help, . . . nor shall
such organizations be construed to be illegal combinations or conspiracies in
restraint of trade . . ."), 15 U.S.C. § 17; the physician and medical
facilities professional peer review exemption in the Health Care Quality Improvements
Act of 1986 (professional review body and members "shall not be liable
in damages under any law of the United States . . . with respect to the action."),
42 U.S.C. § 11,111; and the export associations exemption in the Webb-Pomerene
Act ("Nothing in the Sherman Act shall be construed as declaring illegal
an association entered into for the sole purpose of engaging in export trade
. . ."), 15 U.S.C. § 62.
19/
Accord, NSI Opp. at 26 ("The NSF administers no regulatory scheme
over the Internet or over NSI"); but see, id. at 16
("The U.S. Government has continued to exercise direct control over the
administration of the root zone file and the designation of the root server,");
20/
Sakamoto v. Duty Free Shoppers, Ltd., 764 F.2d 1285 (9th Cir.
1985), cert. denied, 475 U.S. 1081 (1986); Champaign-Urbana
News Agency, Inc. v. J.L. Cummins News Co., 632 F.2d 680 (7th
Cir. 1980); Jackson v. West Indian Co. Ltd., 944 F. Supp. 423 (D.V.I.
1996); Sea Air Shuttle Corp. v. Virgin Islands Port Auth., 782 F. Supp.
1070 (D.V.I. 1991); IT&E Overseas, Inc. v. RCA Global Communications,
Inc., 747 F. Supp. 6, 11 14 (D.D.C. 1990); Thomas, 1998 WL 1191205
(Manishin Dec. Exh. 19); Beverly v. Network Solutions, Inc., C-98-0337-VRW,
slip opinion at 8-9 (N.D. Cal. June 12, 1998) (NSI Exh. 12).
21/
Champaign-Urbana, 632 F.2d 680, 681 (plaintiff challenged defendants
exclusive contract to provide books and magazines to Army and Air Force Exchange
Services); Sakamoto, 764 F.2d 1285, 1286 (plaintiffs challenged legality
of exclusive concession agreement between defendant and Guam Airport Terminal).
22/
See, e.g., IT&E, 474 F. Supp 6, 14 (granting immunity
as a matter of law on Section 1 and Section 2 conspiracy counts, but allowing
Section 2 unlawful monopolization and unlawful attempt to monopolize counts);
Thomas, 1998 WL *31 (conspiracy to monopolize, unlawful monopoly); Sea
Air, 782 F. Supp 1070, 1071 (plaintiff brings only Section 1 claim).
23/
Plaintiffs opening memorandum explained how the Thomas court mistakenly
applied the "clearly articulated" and "actively supervised"
tests of the "state action" doctrine to federal agencies. Pl. Mem.
at 22. NSI, to its credit, does not claim that this aspect of the Thomas
decision was correct. However, NSI still suggests that these tests apply to
federal agencies. NSI Opp. At 22 & n.29. That is wrong. Since federal agencies
only have the power to immunize as granted by Congress, whether or not an agency
"clearly articulates" a policy is irrelevant. That is why "there
is no federal analog to the state action doctrine." Compare Pl.
Mem. at 22 with NSI Opp. At 24-25.
24/
NSI includes in its literature to subscribers that "Network Solutions has
a right found in the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution to refuse to register,
and thereby publish, on the Internet registry of domain names words that it
deems to be inappropriate." Mueller Dec. ¶ 10.
25/
Justice Stevens, writing for the majority in Reno v. ACLU, refers to
the Internet as a "vast library including millions of readily available
an indexed publications" that allows "vast amounts of information"
to disseminate around the globe. 117 S. Ct. 2329, 2334, 2335 (1997).
26/
Even if this Court finds that domain names constitute commercial speech, pgMedia
has demonstrated that NSF cannot survive the scrutiny applied to restrictions
of commercial speech set forth in Central Hudson Gas & Elec. v. Public
Serv. Commn of New York, 447 U.S. 557 (1980). See PI Mem. at
24 n.28.
27/
Time, place and manner restrictions are generally discussed in the context of
First Amendment "forum analysis," which NSF concedes is improper in
this case. NSF Opp. at 32. See Ward v. Rock Against Racism, 491
U.S. 781, 790-91 (1989)("Our cases make clear, however, that even in a
public forum the government may impose reasonable restrictions on the time,
place and manner of protected speech."); see also Perry
Education Assn v. Perry Local Educators Assn, 460 U.S.
37, 44 (1983)("In these quintessential public for[a], the government may
not prohibit all communicative activity. . . [but] may enforce regulations of
the time, place and manner of expression.") pgMedia addresses this argument
only because time, place, and manner restriction analysis applies only to public
forum, which is certainly the class of forum to which the Internet belongs.
See Reno, 117 S. Ct. 2329 at 2324 ("The Internet is a
unique and wholly new medium of worldwide human communication.").
NSFs argument that the Internet is a nonpublic forum, NSF Opp. at 34,
stands in the face of all precedent defining that term. See Perry
,460 U.S. at 47 (internal mailboxes in a public school are a nonpublic forum);
Adderly v. Florida, 385 U.S. 39, 47 (1966)(jail houses are nonpublic
forum).
28/
Further, NSFs wholesale ban on pgMedias TLDs patently fails the
requirement that restrictions of speech be narrowly tailored. Reno, 117
S. Ct. at 2346. Although NSF asserts that its restriction is narrowly tailored
because it affords pgMedia alternative means of expression, NSF Opp. at 31-32,
in fact the need for "universal resolvability" effectively shuts pgMedia
out of the Internet except through use of government-approved domain name content.
It is uncontested that plaintiff is unable to use either its own, or any of
its customers second-level domains, as a medium of expression. NSF cites a zoning
case, City of Renton v. Playtime Theaters, Inc., 475 U.S. 41 (1986),
for its holding that being restricted to "five percent of the available
land within the city" afforded an adequate alternative site for adult theatres.
NSF Opp. at 32. That five percent of available land, however, was "ample,
accessible real estate . . . in all stages of development from raw land to developed,
industrial, warehouse, office, and shopping space that is criss-crossed by freeways,
highways, and roads." 475 U.S. at 53. Here, in contrast, pgMedia has been
evicted from the Internet because its TLDs are excluded by government fiat from
every portion of the "Information Superhighway" worldwide.
29/
NSF further argues
that any decision to stay this matter is supported, in part, by the "familiar
prudential rule of our jurisprudence that courts will not decide difficult constitutional
questions if other bases of decision are available." NSF Opp. at 11 (quoting
Federal Election Commn v. Survival Education Fund Inc., 65 F.3d
285, 290 n.2 (2d Cir. 1995)). Plaintiff agrees, but this prudential rule only
counsels that the Court need not reach the First Amendment question if it decides
the antitrust issues in favor of pgMedia. There is no other non-constitutional
claim that can be adjudicated first in order to avoid the necessity to decide
this case on constitutional grounds.
30/
Testimony of J. Beckwith Burr, Associate Administrator of the National Telecommunications
and Information Government for International Affairs, before the House Committee
on Commerce, on the Future of the Domain Name System (June 10, 1998). See
Haber Dec., Exh. E, at 6.