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-
- Computer underground Digest Wed Nov 13, 1996 Volume 8 : Issue 80
- ISSN 1004-042X
-
- Editor: Jim Thomas (cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu)
- News Editor: Gordon Meyer (gmeyer@sun.soci.niu.edu)
- Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
- Shadow Master: Stanton McCandlish
- Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith
- Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
- Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
- Ian Dickinson
- Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest
-
- CONTENTS, #8.80 (Wed, Nov 13, 1996)
- File 1--AOL vs Cyber Promotions (fwd)
- File 2--Cyber Promotions v. AOL (text of decision)
- File 3--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 Apr, 1996)
-
-
- CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION ApPEARS IN
- THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 4 Nov 1996 12:32:40 -0800 (PST)
- From: "baby-X @ cyberPOLIS" <baby-x@cyberpolis.org>
- Subject: File 1--AOL vs Cyber Promotions (fwd)
-
- ---------- Forwarded message ----------
- Date--Mon, 4 Nov 1996 14:16:36 -0500
- From--Mike Jarvis <mykej@GNN.COM>
- To--Multiple recipients of list VOXERS-AT-LARGE <VOXERS-AT-LARGE@USA.NET>
-
- Just a few minutes ago, Judge Weiner handed down a 28 page opinion on the
- First Amendment issue in the Cyber Promotions case. He ruled that AOL is
- not a state actor and that
-
- "Cyber Promotions does not have a right under the First Amendment to the
- United States Constitution or under the Constitutions of Pennsylvania and
- Virginia to send unsolicited e-mail advertisements over the Internet to
- members of America Online, Inc. and, as a result, America Online, Inc. may
- block any attempts by Cyber Promotions to do so."
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 6 Nov 1996 23:20:07 -0600
- From: jthomas3@SUN.SOCI.NIU.EDU(Jim Thomas)
- Subject: File 2--Cyber Promotions v. AOL (text of decision)
-
- SOURCE - http://www.epic.org/free_speech/cyberp_v_aol.html
-
- IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
- FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
-
- CYBER PROMOTIONS, INC.
- VS.
- AMERICA ONLINE. INC.
-
- C.A. NO. 96-2486
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________
-
-
-
- AMERICA ONLINE, INC.
- VS.
- CYBER PROMOTIONS, INC.
-
- C.A. NO. 96-5213
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________
-
-
-
- MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
-
- WEINER, J.
-
- NOVEMBER 4, 1996
-
- These cases present the novel issue of whether, under the
- First Amendment to the United States Constitution, one private
- company has the unfettered right to send unsolicited e-mail
- advertisements to subscribers of another private online company
- over the Internet and whether the private online company has the
- right to block the e-mail advertisements from reaching its members.
-
- The question is important because while the Internet provides the
- opportunity to disseminate vast amounts of information, the
- Internet does not, at least at the present time, have any means to
- police the dissemination of that information. We therefore find
- that, in the absence of State action, the private online service
- has the right to prevent unsolicited e-mail solicitations from
- reaching its subscribers over the Internet.
-
- The cases have their genesis in a letter dated January
- 26, 1996, in which America Online, Inc. ("AOL") advised Cyber
- Promotions, Inc. ("Cyber") that AOL was upset with Cyber's
- dissemination of unsolicited e-mail to AOL members over the
- Internet. AOL subsequently sent a number of "e-mail bombs"' to
- Cyber's Internet service providers ("ISP").
-
- On March 26, 1996, Cyber filed Civil Action No. 96-2486
- in this Court against AOL in response to AOL's "e-mail bombing" of
- Cyber's ISPs. The Complaint alleges that as a result of AOL's E-
- mail bombing", two of Cyber's ISPs terminated their relationship
- with Cyber and a third ISP refused to enter into a contract with
- Cyber. The Complaint asserts a claim for violation of the Computer
- Fraud and Abuse Act, 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1030, as well as state law
- claims
- for intentional interference with contractual relations, tortious
- interference with prospective contractual relations and unfair
- competition. The Complaint seeks certain injunctive relief and
- damages.
-
- On April 8, 1996, AOL filed a ten-count Complaint against
- Cyber in the United States District Court for the Eastern District
- of Virginia, alleging service and trade name infringement, service
- mark and trade name dilution, false designation of origin, false
- advertising, unfair competition, violations of the Virginia
- Consumer Protection Act, the Electronic Communications Privacy Act,
- the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and the Virginia Computer Crimes
-
- -----------footnotes----------
-
- 1. In past submissions, Cyber has stated that AOL's "e-mail
- bombs" occurred when AOL gathered all unsolicited e-mail sent by
- Cyber to undeliverable AOL addresses, altered the return path of
- such e-mail, and then sent the altered e-mail in a bulk transmis-
- sion to Cyber's ISPs in order to disable the ISPs.
-
- --------end footnotes---------
-
- Act. AOL seeks various injunctive relief and damages.
-
- On May 8, 1996, Cyber filed a First Amended Complaint in
- Civil Action No. 96-2486 in which it asserted the same four claims
- it asserted in its original Complaint and added a declaratory
- judgment claim (Count V). Cyber seeks, inter alia, a "declaration
- that [it] has the right to send to AOL members via the Internet
- unsolicited e-mail advertisements." Amended Complaint at p. 21.
- Cyber also asks the Court to "permanently enjoin[] AOL ... from ...
- directly or indirectly preventing AOL members from receiving
- [Cyber's] e-mail messages." Id.
-
- On June 17, 1996, AOL filed a First Amended Complaint in
- the Virginia action in which it added claims for misappropriation,
- conversion, and unjust enrichment.
-
- By Order dated July 24, 1996, the judge in the Eastern
- District of Virginia to whom AOL's action was assigned, transferred
- that action to this Court, finding that it arises from "the same
- nucleus of operltive facts" as Cyber's action and that therefore
- "the two cases should be consolidated for trial." Upon transfer to
- this Court, AOL's action was assigned Civil Action No. 96-5213. The
- parties have agreed that the First Amended Complaint in that action
- will be treated as setting forth AOL~s counterclaims in Civil
- Action No. 96-2486.
-
- AOL has vehemently argued throughout the brief history of
- these suits that Cyber has no right to send literally millions of
- e-mail messages each day to AOL's Internet servers free of charge
- and resulting in the overload of the e-mail servers. Indeed, the
- court has received a plethora of letters from disgruntled AOL
- members who object to having to receive Cyber's unsolicited e-mail
- whenever they sign on to AOL despite repeated attempts to be
- removed from Cyber's lists. Cyber, on the other hand, has contended
- that without the right to send unsolicited e-mail to AOL members,
- it will go out of business.
-
- Recognizing that Cyber's contention that it has the right
- to send unsolicited e-mail to AOL members over the Internet
- implicates the First Amendment and therefore is a threshold issue,
- the Court directed the parties to brief the following issue:
- Whether Cyber has a right under the First Amendment of the United
- States Constitution to send unsolicited e-mail to AOL members via
- the Internet and concomitantly whether AOL has the right under the
- First Amendment to block the e-mail sent by Cyber from reaching AOL
- members over the Internet. In response, AOL has filed a document
- entitled "Motion for Partial Summary Judgment of America Online,
- Inc. on First Amendment issues." Specifically, AOL seeks summary
- judgment on Cyber's declaratory judgment claim asserted in Count V
- of Cyber's First Amended Complaint. Cyber has filed a document
- entitled "Plaintiff's Memorandum in Support of its First Amendment
- Right to Send Internet E-Mail to Defendant's Members."
-
- The Court also directed the parties to enter into a
- Stipulation of Facts solely for the purpose of resolving the First
- Amendment issue. Pursuant to the Court's directive, the parties
- have stipulated to the following facts:
-
- 1. Cyber is a corporation organized and existing under
- the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, having a place of
- business at 1255 Passmore Street, 1st Floor, Philadelphia,
- Pennsylvania 19111.
-
- 2. AOL is a corporation organized and existing under the
- laws of the State of Delaware with its principal place of business
- at 22000 AOL Way, Dulles, Virginia 20166.
-
- 3. AOL was and is a private online company that has
- invested substantial sums of its own money in equipment, name,
- software and reputation. AOL is not owned in whole or in part by
- the government.
-
- 4. AOL is owned by shareholders, and its stock trades on
- the New York Stock Exchange.
-
- 5. AOL is not a government entity or political subdivision.
-
- 6. AOL's members or subscribers pay prescribed fees for
- use of AOL resources, access to AOL and access and use of AOL's e-
- mail system and its connection to the Internet.
-
- 7. AOL's e-mail system operates through dedicated
- computers known as servers, which consist of computer hardware and
- software purchased, maintained and owned by AOL. AOL's computer
- servers have a finite, though expandable, capacity to handle e-
- mail. All Internet e-mail from non-AOL members to AOL customers or
- members and from AOL customers or members to non-AOL members
- requires the use of AOL's computer hardware and software in
- combination with the hardware and software of the Internet and the
- hardware and software of the non-AOL members.
-
- 8. Private companies compete with AOL in the online business.
-
- 9. There has been no government involvement in AOL's
- business decision to institute or reinstitute a block directed to
- Internet e-mail sent by Cyber to AOL members or subscribers.
-
- 10. Although the Internet is accessible to all persons
- with just a computer, a modem and a service provider, the constitu-
- ent parts of the Internet (namely the computer hardware and
- software, servers, service providers and related items) are owned
- and managed by private entities and persons, corporations,
- educational institutions and government entities, who cooperate to
- allow their constituent parts to be interconnected by a vast
- network of phone lines.
-
- 11. In order for non-AOL members to send Internet e-mail
- to AOL members, non-AOL members must utilize a combination of their
- own hardware and software, the Internet and AOL's network.
-
- 12. To obtain its initial access to the Internet, AOL
- obtained an Internet address and domain name from IANA, a clearing-
- house that routinely and ministerially assigns Internet addresses
- and domain names.
-
- 13. Cyber, an advertising agency incorporated in 1996,
- provides advertising services for companies and individuals wishing
- to advertise their products and services via e-mail.
-
- 14. Cyber sends its e-mail via the Internet to members of
- AOL, members of other commercial online services and other
- individuals with an Internet e-mail address.
-
- 15. AOL provides its subscribing members with one or more
- e-mail addresses so that members can exchange e-mail with one
- another and exchange e-mail (both sending and receiving) over the
- Internet with non-AOL members.
-
- 16. AOL has attached to its Memorandum of Law in Support
- of its Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on First Amendment
- Issues three sets of examples of e-mail messages sent by Cyber to
- AOL members. The first set (Tab 1) consists of a multi-page set of
- advertisements; the second set (Tab 2) consists of an exclusive or
- single-advertiser e-mail; and the third set (Tab 3) consists of a
- document called by Cyber an "e-mag." Under each tab are two
- examples, the first selected by AOL and the second selected by
- Cyber. The Court has reviewed all of the examples and notes that
- many of the ads include get-rich-quick ads, weight loss ads, health
- aid promises and even phone sex services.
-
- 17. To attract membership, AOL offers a variety of
- services, options, resources and support, including content-based
- services, access to stock quotes, children's entertainment, news,
- and the ability to send and receive Internet e-mail to and from
- non-AOL members.
-
- In addition to the parties's Stipulation of Facts, it is
- necessary for resolution of the issue before us to relate some of
- the factual findings about the Internet itself made earlier this
- year by our court in American Civil Liberties Union v. Reno, 929
- F.Supp. 824 (E.D. Pa. 1996). They are as follows:
-
- 18. "The Internet is...a unique and wholly new medium of
- worldwide human communication." Id. at 844.
-
- 19. The Internet is "a giant network which interconnects
- innumerable smaller groups of linked computer networks." Id. at
- 830. In short, it is "a global Web of linked networks and comput-
- ers..." Id. at 831.
-
- 20. "The Internet is an international system." Id. It is
- "a decentralized, global medium of communications -- or 'cyberspace'
- --
- that links people, institutions, corporations, and governments
- round the world. This communications medium allows any of the
- literally tens of millions of people with access to the Internet to
- exchange information." Id.
-
- 21. "No single entity -- academic, corporate, governmen-
- tal, or non-profit -- administers the Internet. It exists and
- functions as a result of the fact that hundreds of thousands of
- separate operators of computers and computer networks independently
- decided to use common data transfer protocol to exchange communica-
- tions and information with other computers (which in turn exchange
- communications and information with still other computers)." Id. at
- 832.
-
- 22. Computer users have a wide variety of avenues by
- which to access the Internet. Id. One such avenue is "through one
- of the major national commercial 'online services' such as [AOL]...
- Id. at 833. These online services offer nationwide computer
- networks (so that subscribers can dial-in to a local telephone
- number), and the services provide extensive and well organized
- content within their own proprietary computer networks. In addition
- to allowing access to the extensive content available within each
- online service, the services also allow subscribers to link to the
- much larger resources of the Internet." Id. (emphasis in original)
- "The major commercial online services have almost twelve million
- individual subscribers across the United States." Id. Approximately
- six million individuals are subscribers of AOL.
-
- 23. There are a number of different ways to communicate
- over the Internet. One such way "is via electronic mail, or 'e-
- mail', comparable in principle to sending a first class letter. One
- can address and transmit a message to one or more other people."
- Id. at 834.
-
- 24."[T]he content on the Internet is as diverse as human
- thought." Id. at 842.
-
- 25. "Communications over the Internet do not "invade" an
- individuals's home or appear on one's computer screen unbidden.
- Users seldom encounter content 'by accident.'" Id. at 844.
-
- 26. Unlike a radio or television, "the receipt of
- information on the Internet requires a series of affirmative steps
- more deliberate and directed than merely turning a dial." Id. at
- 845.
-
- STANDARD OF REVIEW
-
- Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c), summary
- judgment may be granted when, "after considering the record
- evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, no
- genuine issue of material fact exists and the moving party is
- entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Turner v. Schering-
- Plough Corp., 901 F.2d 335, 340-41 (3d Cir. 1990). For a dispute
- to be "genuine," the evidence must be such that a reasonable jury
- could return a verdict for the non-moving party. Anderson v.
- Liberty Lobby Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986); Williams v. Borough
- of Chester, 891 F.2d, 458, 460 (3d Cir. 1989). To establish a
- genuine issue of material fact, the non-moving party must introduce
- evidence beyond the mere pleadings to create an issue of material
- fact on "an element essential to that party's case, and on which
- that party will bear the burden of proof at trial." Celotex v.
- Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322 (1986). The burden of demonstrating the
- absence of genuine issues of material fact is initially on the
- moving party regardless of which party would have the burden of
- persuasion at trial. First Nat'l Bank of Pennsylvania v. Lincoln
- Nat'l Life Ins., 824 F.2d 177, 180 (3d Cir. 1987). Following such
- a showing, the non-moving party must present evidence through
- affidavits or depositions and admissions on file which comprise of
- a showing sufficient to establish the existence of every element
- essential to that party's case. Celotex, 477 U.S. at 323. If that
- evidence in, however, "'merely colorable' or is 'not significantly
- probative,' summary judgment may be granted." Equimark Commercial
- Finance Co. v. C.I.T. Financial Corp. 812 F.2d 141, 144 (3d Cir.
- 1987) (quoting, in part, Anderson, 477 U.S. at 249-50).
-
- In view of the parties' Stipulation of Facts and the
- prior factual findings of this Court in ACLU v. Reno, supra., the
- Court finds there are no genuine issues of material fact as to the
- First Amendment issue and that that issue is suitable for summary
- disposition.
-
- In its Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, AOL contends
- that Cyber has no First Amendment right to send unsolicited e-mail
- to AOL members over the Internet because AOL is not a state actor,
- AOL's e-mail servers are not public fora in which Cyber has a right
- to speak, Cyber's right to use AOL's, service free of charge, does
- not substantially outweigh AOL's right to speak or not to speak,
- and that AOL's restrictions on mass e-mail solicitations are
- tailored to serve a substantial interest. Motion for Partial
- Summary Judgment at 6. Because we find AOL is not a state actor and
- none of its activities constitute state action, we need not
- consider AOL's remaining First Amendment contentions.
-
- The First Amendment to the United States Constitution
- states that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment
- of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging
- the freedom of speech, or of the press." The United States Supreme
- Court has recognized that "the constitutional guarantee of free
- speech is a guarantee only against abridgement by government,
- federal or state." Hudgens v.NLRB, 424 U.S. 507, 513 (1976). Only
- recently, the Supreme Court has stated that "the guarantees of free
- speech ... guard only against encroachment by the government and
- 'erec[t] no shield against merely private conduct.'" Hurley v.
- Irish-American Gay Group of Boston, 115 S.Ct. 2338, 2344 (1995)
- (citation omitted).
-
- In the case sub judice, the parties have stipulated that
- AOL is a private online company that is not owned in whole or part
- by the government. Stipulation of Facts at p. 3. (emphasis added).
- The parties have further stipulated that "AOL is not a government
- entity or political subdivision." Id. at p. 5. They have also
- stipulated that there has been no government involvement in AOL's
- business decision to institute or reinstitute a block directed to
- Internet e-mail sent by Cyber to AOL members or subscribers. Id. at
- p. 9.
-
- Despite these stipulations, Cyber argues that AOL's
- conduct has the character of state action. As a general matter,
- private action can only be considered state action when "there is
- a sufficiently close nexus between the State and the challenged
- action of [the private entity] so that the action of the latter may
- be fairly treated as that of the State itself." Blum v. Yaretsky,
- 457 U.S. 991, 1004 (1982). Recently, our Court of Appeals observed
- that the Supreme Court appears to utilize three distinct tests in
- determining whether there has been state action. Mark v. Borough of
- Hatboro, 51 F.3d 1137, 1142 (3d Cir. 1995). First, we must consider
- whether "'the private entity has exercised powers that are
- traditionally the exclusive prerogative of the state.'" Id.
- (quoting Blum v. Yaretsky, 457 U.S. at 1004-05. (emphasis in
- Mark)). This test is known as the exclusive public function test.
- If the private entity does not exercise such powers, we must
- consider whether "'the private entity has acted with the help of or
- in concert with state officials.'" Mark, 51 F.3d at 1142 (quoting
- McKeesport Hospital v. Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical
- Ed., 24 F.3d 519, 524 (3d Cir. 1994)). The final test is whether
- "'[t]he State has so far insinuated itself into a position of
- interdependence with ... [the acting party] that it must be
- recognized as a joint participant in the challenged activity.'"
- Mark, 51 F.3d at 1142 (quoting Krynicky v. University of Pitts-
- burgh, 742 F.2d 94, 98 (3d Cir. 1984)).
-
- With regard to the first test, AOL exercises absolutely
- no powers which are in any way the prerogative, let alone the
- exclusive prerogative, of the State. In ACLU, supra, this Court
- previously found that no single entity, including the State,
- administers the Internet. ACLU, 929 F.Supp. at 832. Rather, the
- Court found that the Internet is a "'global Web of linked networks
- and computers" which exists and functions as the result of the
- desire of hundreds of thousands of computer operators and networks
- to use common data transfer data protocol to exchange communica-
- tions and information. Id. In addition, "the constituent parts of
- the Internet ... are owned and managed by private entities and
- persons, corporations, educational institutions and government
- entities, who cooperate to allow their constituent parts to be
- interconnected by a vast network of phone lines." Stipulation of
- Facts at p. 10. As a result, tens of millions of people with access
- to the Internet can exchange information. AOL is merely one of many
- private online companies which allow its members access to the
- Internet through its e-mail system where they can exchange
- information with the general public. The State has absolutely no
- interest in, and does not regulate, this exchange of information
- between people, institutions, corporations and governments around
- the world.
-
- Cyber argues, however, that "'by providing Internet e-mail
- and acting as the sole conduit to its members' Internet e-mail
- boxes, AOL has opened up that part of its network and as such, has
- sufficiently devoted this domain for public use. This dedication of
- AOL's Internet e-mail accessway performs a public function in that
- it is open to the public, free of charge to any user, where public
- discourse, conversations and commercial transactions can and do
- take place." Cyber's Memorandum in Support of its First Amendment
- Right to Send Internet E-Mail to Defendant's Members at 13. Cyber
- therefore contends that AOL's Internet e-mail accessway is similar
- to the company town in Marsh v. Alabama, 326 U.S. 501 (1946), which
- the Supreme Court found performed a public function and therefore
- was a state actor.
-
- In Marsh, a Jehovah's Witness was convicted of criminal
- trespass for distributing literature without a license on a
- sidewalk in a town owned by a private company. The Supreme Court
- found that since the private company owned the streets, sidewalks,
- and business block, paid the sheriff, privately owned and managed
- the sewage system, and owned the building where the United States
- post office was located, the company, in effect, operated as the
- municipal government of the town. Marsh, 326 U.S. at 502-03. "[T]he
- owner of the company town was performing the full spectrum of
- municipal powers and stood in the shoes of the State." Lloyd Corp.
- V. Tanner, 407 U.S. 551, 569 (1972). The Court observed that "[t]he
- more an owner, for his advantage, opens up his property for use by
- the public in general, the more do his rights become circumscribed
- by the statutory and constitutional rights of those who use it."
- Marsh, 326 U.S. at 506. As a result, the Court found state action
- in "the State['s] ... attempt[] to impose criminal punishment on
- appellant for undertaking to distribute religious literature in a
- company town..." Marsh, 326 U.S. at 509. Our Court of Appeals has
- noted that "Marsh has been construed narrowly." Cable Investments.
- Inc. v. Woolley, 867 F.2d 151, 162 (3d Cir. 1989).<2>
-
- By providing its members with access to the Internet
- through its e-mail system so that its members can exchange
- information with those members of the public who are also connected
- to the Internet, AOL is not exercising any of the municipal powers
- or public services traditionally exercised by the State as did the
- private company in Marsh. Although AOL has technically opened its
- e-mail system to the public by connecting with the Internet, AOL
-
- ---------footnotes-----------
-
- 2 Indeed, our Court of Appeals has observed that the exclusive
- public function test itself "rarely could be satisfied." Mark, 51
- F.3d at 1142. "Thus, in Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Co., 419
- U.S. 345 (1974), the Court held that a private utility company,
- extensively regulated by the state, and apparently holding at least
- a partial monopoly in its territory, did not act under color of
- state law, in part because the state where the utility was engaged
- in business had 'rejected the contention that the furnishing of
- utility services is either a state function or a municipal duty.'
- (citation omitted). Similarly, in Rendell-Baker v. Kohn, 457 U.S.
- 830 (1982), the Court held that a private entity engaged in the
- education of maladjusted high school students did not perform an
- exclusively public function because '[the state's] legislative
- policy choice [to fund the public school] in no way makes these
- services the exclusive province of the State.' (citation omitted);
- see also Black v. Indiana Area Sch. Dist., 985 F.2d 707, 710-11 (3d
- Cir. 1993) (private contractor providing state school bus program
- at state expense not performing exclusive state function)." Mark,
- id.
-
- ---------end footnoes-----------
-
- has not opened its property to the public by performing any
- municipal power or essential public service and, therefore, does
- not stand in the shoes of the State. Marsh is simply inapposite to
- the facts of the case sub judice.
-
- Cyber also argues that AOL's Internet e-mail connection
- constitutes an exclusive public function because there are no
- alternative avenues of communication for Cyber to send its e-mail
- to AOL members. As support for this proposition, Cyber directs our
- attention to the decisions of the Supreme Court in United States
- Postal Service v. Greenburgh Civic Assn's, 453 U.S. 114 (1981);
- Lloyd Corp v. Tanner, 407 U.S. 551 (1972) and Amalqamated Food
- Employees Union v. Logan Valley Plaza, 391 U.S. 308 (1968). Of
- these decisions, only the Lloyd decision is helpful to Cyber.
-
- In Greenburgh, a civic association challenged a federal
- statue which prohibited the deposit of unstamped "mailable matter"
- in a letterbox approved by the United States Postal Service. The
- civic association contended that the First Amendment guaranteed
- them the right to deposit, without postage, their notices,
- circulars, flyers in such letterboxes. The Supreme Court upheld the
- constitutionality of the statute, finding that neither the
- enactment nor the enforcement of the statute was geared in any way
- to the content of the message sought to be placed in the letterbox.
- The Court also noted that the statute did not prevent individuals
- from going door-to-door to distribute their message or restrict the
- civic organization's right to use the mails. Greenburgh, however,
- did not involve the issue of whether there was state action. It
- therefore is inapplicable to the issue of whether AOL's conduct
- constitutes state action.
-
- In Logan Valley, a case involving peaceful picketing
- directed solely at one establishment within a shopping center, the
- Court reviewed the Marsh decision in detail, emphasized the
- similarities between a shopping center and a company town and
- concluded that a shopping center is the "functional equivalent" of
- the business district in Marsh. As a result, the Court held that
- the picketers had a First Amendment right to picket within a
- shopping center. Logan Valley, however, was subsequently overruled
- by Lloyd,supra. Hudgens v. National Labor Relations Board, 424 U.S.
- 507 (1976). ("[W]e make clear now, if it was not clear before, that
- the rationale of Logan Valley did not survive the Court's decision
- in the Lloyd case.")
-
- In Lloyd, a group of individuals sought to distribute
- handbills in the interior of a privately owned shopping center. The
- content of the handbills was not directed at any one establishment
- in the shopping center but instead was directed at the Vietnam War.
- The Court noted that, unlike the situation in Logan Valley where
- the protestors had no other alternative to convey their message at
- the single establishment in the shopping center, the protesters in
- Lloyd could distribute their message about the Vietnam war on any
- public street, sidewalk or park outside the mall. The Court
- therefore found that "[i]t would be an unwarranted infringement of
- property rights to require [the protesters] to yield to the
- exercise of First Amendment under circumstances where adequate
- alternative avenues of communication exist." Lloyd, 407 U.S. at
- 567. The Lloyd Court went on to reject the individuals' functional
- equivalency argument, finding that the private shopping center
- neither assumed the full spectrum of municipal powers nor stood in
- the shoes of the state, as did the private company in Marsh. The
- Court held that, "[t]he First and Fourteenth Amendments safeguard
- the rights of free speech and assembly by limitations on state
- action, not on action by the owner of private property used
- nondiscriminatorily for private purposes only." Lloyd, 407 U.S. at
- 567 (emphasis in original).
-
- Cyber has numerous alternative avenues of sending its
- advertising to AOL members. An example of another avenue Cyber has
- of sending its advertising to AOL members over the Internet is the
- World Wide Web which would allow access by Internet users,
- including AOL customers, who want to receive Cyber's e-mail.
- Examples of non-Internet avenues include the United States mail,
- telemarketing, television, cable, newspapers, magazines and even
- passing out leaflets. Of course, AOL's decision to block Cyber's e-
- mail from reaching AOL's members does not prevent Cyber from
- sending its e-mail advertisements to the members of competing
- commercial online services, including CompuServe, the Microsoft
- Network and Prodigy.
-
- Having found that AOL is not a state actor under the
- exclusive public function test, we evaluate whether AOL is a state
- actor under the remaining two tests, i.e. whether AOL is acting
- with the help of or in concert with state officials and whether the
- State has put itself in a position of interdependence with AOL such
- that it must be considered a participant in AOL's conduct. These
- tests actually overlap one another.
-
- In its Memorandum, Cyber does not specifically argue that
- AOL is acting in concert with state officials. Indeed, the two
- major cases from the Supreme Court which have found state action
- under this test are clearly distinguishable from the case sub
- judice. See, Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co., 398 U.S. 144 (1970)
- (finding a conspiracy between a private actor and a state official
- to engage in unlawful discrimination constituted action under color
- of law for purposes of 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983); Lugar v. Edmondson Oil
- Co., 457 U.S. 922 (1982) (finding private creditor's pre-judgment
- attachment petition upon which clerk of state court issued a writ
- of attachment and sheriff executed the writ on property of private
- debtor was state action under Sec. 1983).
-
- Rather, Cyber relies on the "joint participation"
- doctrine and contends that "AOL's use of the Court to obtain
- injunctive relief and/or damages [which it seeks in its prayer for
- relief in its counterclaim] and its assertions of federal and state
- statutory law, which if applicable to Cyber's activities, would
- violate Cyber's First Amendment rights." Cyber's Memorandum at 15.
-
- In Edmonson v. Leesville Concrete Co., 500 U.S. 614
- (1991) the Supreme Court refined the joint participation test by
- announcing that courts must ask "first whether the claimed
- constitutional deprivation resulted from the exercise of a right or
- privilege having its source in state authority; and second, whether
- the private party charged with the deprivation could be described
- in all fairness as a state actor." Edmonson, 500 U.S. at 620. Under
- the first prong, the inquiry is "under what authority did the
- private person engage in the allegedly unlawful acts." Mark, 51
- F.3d at 1144.
-
- In the case sub judice, the parties have stipulated that
- "[t]here has been no government involvement in AOL's business
- decisions with respect to e-mail sent by Cyber nor in any AOL
- decision to institute or reinstitute a block directed to Internet
- e-mail sent by Cyber to AOL members or subscribers." Stipulation of
- Facts at p. 9. As a result, Cyber is unable to satisfy even the
- first prong of the joint participation test.
-
- In addition, our Court of Appeals has stated that
- "[m]erely instituting a routine civil suit does not transform a
- litigant's actions into those taken under color of state law."
- Tunstall v. Office of Judicial Support, 820 F.2d 631, 634 (3d Cir.
- 1987). The Tunstall Court concluded that the filing of a quiet
- title action in state court by a purchaser of land to complete the
- seizure of plaintiff's property did not involve state action since
- the suit "did not attempt any seizure of property with the
- cooperation of state officials as in the Lugar line of cases." Id.
- In addition, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh
- Circuit has found that a regulated utility did not act under color
- of state law when it obtained a temporary restraining order from a
- state court. Cobb v. Georgia Power Co., 757 F.2d 1248 (llth Cir.
- 1985). The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
- has held that the mere filing of a state law contempt proceeding
- does not constitute joint participation so as to satisfy the color
- of state law requirement under 42 U.S.C. sec. 1983. Dahlberg v.
- Becker,
- 748 F.2d 85 (2d Cir. 1984).
-
- Perhaps recognizing the futility of its argument, Cyber
- contends in its Reply Memorandum that "[i]t is not Cyber's position
- that the mere filing of an action provides a party with the
- requisite state action to assert a First Amendment violation.
- Rather it is the Court's participation with the litigant in issuing
- or enforcing an order which impinges on another's First Amendment
- rights. Grandbouche v. Clancey, 825 F.2d 1463, 1466 (10th Cir.
- 1987)." Reply Memorandum at 7. In Grandbouche, the United States
- Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit stated that the first
- Amendment "may be applicable in the context of discovery orders,
- even if all of the litigants are private entities." The Court found
- government action present as a result of a magistrate's order
- compelling discovery and the trial court's enforcement of that
- order.
-
- We are troubled by the Grandbouche decision because it
- has the effect of creating government action every time a magis-
- trate simply signs, and a trial judge enforces, a discovery order.
- Therefore, even if this Court had enforced a discovery order (which
- we have not), we would not follow the Grandbouche decision.
-
- In sum, we find that since AOL is not a state actor and
- there has been no state action by AOL's activities under any of the
- three tests for state action enunciated by our Court of Appeals in
- Mark, Cyber has no right under the First Amendment to the United
- States Constitution to send unsolicited e-mail to AOL's members. It
- follows that AOL, as a private company, may block any attempts by
- Cyber to do so.
-
- Cyber also contends that its practice of sending e-mail
- advertisements to AOL's servers is also protected "under state
- constitutional law, which in many instances, affords even broader
- protection than federal First Amendment guarantees which this Court
- can enforce." Cyber's Memorandum at 17. Specifically, Cyber refers
- to the state constitutions of Pennsylvania and Virginia. 3 Although
- this argument is beyond the scope of the issue the Court directed
- the parties to brief, we will nevertheless consider it at this
- time.
-
- The theory that a state constitution's free speech
- provisions may afford broader rights than similar provisions of the
- United States Constitution was first recognized by the Supreme
- Court in PruneYard Shopping Center v. Robins, 447 U.S. 74 (1980).
- The PruneYard Court held that, while the First Amendment did not
- grant the defendants the right to solicit in a privately owned
- shopping center, state (California) law might grant that right. The
- Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has itself recognized that "Pennsyl-
- vania may afford greater protection to individual rights under its
- Constitution" than the Constitution of the United States. Western
-
- -------footnotes------
-
- 3 Cyber contends it is entitled to the protection of the
- Pennsylvania Constitution because Cyber's e-mail originates from
- Pennsylvania and that it is entitled to the protection of the
- Virginia Constitution because AOL's blocking actions occur in
- Virginia.
-
- --------end footnotes------
-
- Pennsylvania Socialist Workers 1982 Campaign v. Conn.Gen.Life
- Ins.Co., 515 A.2d 1331, 1333-34 (1986) (plurality opinion);
- Commonwealth v. Tate, 432 A.2d 1382 (1981).
-
- Article 1, Section 7 of the Pennsylvania Constitution
- provides:
-
- The free communication of thoughts and opin-
- ions is one of the invaluable rights of man,
- and every citizen may freely speak, write and
- print on any subject...
-
- In Tate, the only case on which Cyber relies, the Supreme Court of
- Pennsylvania overturned convictions for defiant trespass stemming
- from a group of protester's refusal to desist from distributing
- politically oriented materials in a peaceful manner on the campus
- of a privately owned college. The court found that the college had
- created a public forum by opening the campus to the public to hear
- the director of the FBI to speak in a campus building. Because the
- college had become a public forum and because the defiant trespass
- statute had provided a defense to a charge of defiant trespass in
- those circumstances <4>, the Tate Court held that the protesters had
- a right to speak freely without fear of criminal conviction under
- Article I, Section 7 of the Pennsylvania Constitution.
-
- Tate was subsequently clarified by the Supreme Court of
- Pennsylvania in Western Pennsylvania Socialist Workers. supra. In
- that case, a political committee, its chairman, a gubernatorial
-
- -------footnotes------
-
- 4 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. tit. 18 sec.3503(c)(2) provides:
- It is a defense to prosecution under this section that:
- the premises were at the time open to members
- of the public and the actor complied with all
- lawful conditions imposed on access to or
- remaining on the premises.
-
- ------end footnotes-------
-
- candidate and a campaign worker claimed they had the right under,
- inter alia, Article 1, Section 7 of the Pennsylvania Constitution
- to collect signatures for the gubernatorial candidate~s campaign at
- privately owned shopping malls, including one owned by Connecticut
- General Life Insurance Co. Connecticut General had a policy which
- uniformly prohibited all political activities including solicita-
- tion at its mall. The Court distinguished Tate, by observing that
- "[B]y adhering to a strict no political solicitation policy,
- [Connecticut General] has uniformly and generally prevented the
- mall from becoming a public forum." Western Pennsylvania, 515 A.2d
- at 1337. Rather, the Court noted that Connecticut General had only
- invited the public into the mall for commercial purposes. Since
- Connecticut General had not invited the public into the mall for
- political purposes, the Court held that Article 1, Section 7, was
- inapplicable.
-
- The Western Pennsylvania Court also rejected attempts to
- analogize the mall to the company town in Marsh v. Alabama. supra
- by stating:
-
- A shopping mall is not equivalent to a town.
- Though it duplicates the commercial function
- traditionally associated with a town's busi-
- ness district or marketplace, the similarity
- ends there. People do not live in shopping
- malls. Malls do not provide essential public
- services such as water, sewers roads, sanita-
- tion or vital records, nor are they responsi-
- ble for education, recreation or transporta-
- tion. Thus, the Marsh analysis is not applica-
- ble to the instant case.
-
- Western Pennsylvania, 515 A.2d at 1338.
-
- The case sub judice is more similar to Western Pennsylva-
- nia than it is to Tate. AOL's e-mail servers are certainly not a
- traditional public forum such as a street, park or even the college
- in Tate. Instead, AOL's e-mail servers are privately owned and are
- only available to the subscribers of AOL who pay a fee for their
- usage. Moreover, unlike Tate, AOL has not presented its e-mail
- servers to the public at large for disseminating political messages
- at a certain event. Indeed, AOL has never presented its e-mail
- servers to the public at large for dissemination of messages in
- general as AOL's servers have a finite capacity. Stipulation of
- Facts at p. 7. As noted above, AOL's e-mail system simply provides
- a means for its members to communicate with those members of the
- public who are connected with the Internet.
- Cyber also does not have the right under the Constitution
- of Virginia to send unsolicited e-mail over the Internet to AOL
- members. Article I, Section 12 of the Virginia Constitution
- provides:
-
- That the freedoms of speech and of the press
- are among the great bulwarks of liberty, and
- can never be restrained except by despotic
- governments; that any citizen may freely
- speak, write, and publish his sentiments on
- all subjects, being responsible for the abuse
- of that right; that the General Assembly shall
- not pass any law abridging the freedom of
- speech or of the press, nor the right of the
- people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
- the government for the redress of grievances.
-
- There are no decisions which interpret this provision in a manner
- which would be helpful to Cyber. The decisions Cyber cites,
- National Capital Naturists. Inc. v. Board of Supervisors, 878 F.2d
- 128, 133 (4th Cir. 1989); Leachman v. Rector & Visitors of the
- Univ. of Virginia, 691 F.Supp. 961, 964 n.5 (W.D.Va. 1988), aff'd,
- 915 F.2d 1564 (4th Cir. 1990); Robert v. Norfolk, 188 Va. 413, 49
- S.E.2d 697, 700 (1948) all merely recognize the principle enunciat-
- ed by the Supreme Court in PruneYard that states have the "sover-
- eign right" to give their constitutions an expansive interpreta-
- tion.
-
- Although we have found that Cyber has no right under the
- First Amendment of the United States Constitution or under the
- Constitutions of Pennsylvania or Virginia to send unsolicited e-
- mail to members of AOL, we will not, at this time, enter judgment
- on Count V of Cyber's First Amended Complaint for declaratory
- relief. This is because Cyber contends in its Reply brief that
- "many more issues ... have to be addressed since there are numerous
- reasons beyond the First Amendment which will permit Cyber to send
- e-mail to AOL members." Cyber's Reply-Memorandum at 1. Therefore,
- we will simply declare that Cyber has no right under the First
- Amendment to the United States Constitution or under the Constitu-
- tions of Pennsylvania or Virginia to send unsolicited e-mail over
- the Internet to members of AOL. We will allow Cyber ten days from
- the date of this Memorandum Opinion and Order to submit a list of
- the theories other than the First Amendment it believes entitles it
- to send unsolicited e-mail to members of AOL.
-
- An Order to that effect follows.
-
-
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________
-
-
-
- IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
- FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
-
- CYBER PROMOTIONS, INC.
- VS.
- AMERICA ONLINE. INC.
-
- C.A. NO. 96-2486
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________
-
-
-
- AMERICA ONLINE, INC.
- VS.
- CYBER PROMOTIONS, INC.
-
- C.A. NO. 96-5213
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________
-
-
-
- ORDER
-
- The motion of America Online, Inc. for partial summary
- judgment on First Amendment issues is GRANTED in part and DENIED in
- part.
-
- The Court declares that Cyber Promotions, Inc. does not
- have a right under the First Amendment to the United States
- Constitution or under the Constitutions of Pennsylvania and
- Virginia to send unsolicited e-mail advertisements over the
- Internet to members of America Online, Inc. and, as a result,
- America Online, Inc. may block any attempts by Cyber Promotions,
- Inc. to do so.
-
- Cyber Promotions, Inc. shall, within ten days of the date
- of this Order, submit to the Court a list of the theories other
- than the First Amendment which it believes entitles it to send
- unsolicited e-mail to members of America Online, Inc.
-
- Either party may request that we issue an Order certify-
- ing our decision for an immediate interlocutory appeal to the
- United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.
-
- IT IS SO ORDERED.
-
- CHARLES R. WEINER
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 7 Nov 1996 22:51:01 CST
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- End of Computer Underground Digest #8.80
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