MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Berthold Types Limited filed a five-count complaint against defendants European Mikrograf Corp., Helios Software Gmbh, and Helmut Tschemernjak alleging counterfeiting (Count I), trademark infringement (Count II), false designation of origin and unfair competition (Count III), deceptive trade and business practices (Count IV), and unjust enrichment (Count V). Defendants Helios Software (“Helios”) and Helmut Tschemernjak have filed a motion to dismiss plaintiffs complaint as to them for lack of personal jurisdiction. For the following reasons, defendants Helios and Tschemernjak’s motion to dismiss is GRANTED.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Berthold Types Limited is in the business of marketing typefaces bearing distinctive registered trademarks. Defendant Helios Software is a German corporation with its principal place of business in Garbsen, Germany, which markets font software in competition with plaintiff. Defendant Helmut Tschemernjak is the president of Helios. Plaintiff alleges that Tschemernjak personally directed and controlled the infringing and deceptive activity of Helios and European Mikrograf Corporation (“EMC”). Defendant EMC is the American distributor of Helios, located in California. Helios authorizes EMC to market the font software sold by Helios in the United States. Plaintiff alleges that defendants market and sell font software as part of a software package called PDF Handshake, which includes font software for over 340 typefaces identified by the Berthhold trademarks, without permission or authorization.
*930 As part of its business, Helios runs an interactive English website at www.hel-ios.com. The website provides comprehensive product presentations on PDF Handshake’s features and applications. The website provides customers with the ability to download and print a document entitled “HELIOS Software Update Service AgreementA customer may fill out that agreement and submit it to “[the customer’s] national Helios dealer/distributor” and make a payment to the national distributor “one year in advance.” Once these steps are taken, the customer can access and download files containing updates of the PDF Handshake and other Helios products directly from the Helios website. However, customers cannot purchase Helios products directly off of the website, and no commercial transactions take place over the website. The website also has interactive features which allow the customer to interact with the Helios host computer. One such feature is a “feedback forum” in which customers are encouraged to submit ideas on how to enhance the software so as to make it more efficient and easy to use. There is also a “support site,” which includes a “questions and answers” section and a link to a down-loadable addendum to the PDF Handshake manual. The site also contains e-mail addressees to contact Helios. Tschemernjak is identified as the main contact person reachable by e-mail. Finally, the site includes downloadable news briefs on Helios’ activities.
ANALYSIS
Defendants argue in their motion to dismiss that Illinois does not have personal jurisdiction over them. Plaintiff claims that defendants are subject to personal jurisdiction in this case based on the Illinois long-arm statute. 735 ILCS 5/2-209(a). Plaintiff has the burden of demonstrating that personal jurisdiction exists.
RAR, Inc. v. Turner Diesel, Ltd.,
To exercise personal jurisdiction over a foreign defendant in a federal question case, two elements must be present: (1) the exercise of jurisdiction must accord with due process, and (2) the defendant must be amenable to service of process.
United States v. Martinez De Ortiz,
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment limits when a state may assert personal jurisdiction over nonresident individuals and corporations. Id. at 1277. A state may assert general or specific jurisdiction over a defendant. *931 General jurisdiction is present when the defendant has continuous and systematic contacts with the forum, while specific jurisdiction is present in a suit arising out of or relating to the defendant’s contacts with the forum state. Id. Plaintiff has not explicitly stated whether it is arguing that this court has general or specific jurisdiction over defendants in this case. Nevertheless, this court will construe plaintiffs argument to be made in favor of a finding of either general or specific jurisdiction.
Plaintiff has failed to show that either of the defendants has had “continuous and systematic contacts” with Illinois required for general jurisdiction. Plaintiff argues at length defendants’ “purposeful direction of commercial activity” in Illinois through its website. Plaintiff, however, has not argued that defendants have had any other contact with the state of Illinois, with the exception of possible visits to a trade show and the sponsorship of an educational seminar in Chicago. While several courts have found specific jurisdiction based upon a defendant’s soliciting business through a website, plaintiff has not cited and this court has not found any case which found general jurisdiction over a defendant premised upon a website which does not provide for direct sales.
See LaSalle Nat’l Bank v. Vitro,
As for specific jurisdiction, the court “must decide whether a defendant has ‘purposefully established minimum contacts with the forum State’ and consider whether, by traditional standards, those contacts would make personal jurisdiction reasonable and fair under the circumstances.”
RAR,
At issue here is whether defendants Helios and Tschemernjak’s contacts with Illinois, which have been primarily over the Internet, are sufficient to support the exercise of personal jurisdiction. Defendants argue that the Internet contacts they have with Illinois are insufficient, and the exercise of personal jurisdiction in Illinois would not comport with fair play and substantial justice. Plaintiff counters that defendants’ Internet site caused injury in Illinois and that defendants purposefully direct commercial activity to Illinois, thus making the exercise of personal jurisdiction fair and reasonable.
Plaintiff first argues that jurisdiction is proper in Illinois because the injury was felt and thus defendants committed a tort in Illinois. Under the Illinois long-arm statute, torts that are committed in Illinois authorize the exercise of jurisdiction here. 735 ILCS 5/2-209(a)(2). To sell an infringing article to a buyer in Illinois is to commit a tort in Illinois sufficient to confer jurisdiction under the tort provision of the long-arm statute.
See North American Philips Corp. v. Ameri
*932
can Vending Sales, Inc.,
Plaintiff next argues that defendants are subject to jurisdiction because they have specifically directed commercial activity in Illinois via the Internet and by attending a trade show and sponsoring a seminar in Chicago. The issue of what type of Internet activity is sufficient to establish personal jurisdiction in a particular forum has yet to be addressed by the Seventh Circuit. However, a jurisprudence of the relationship between Internet activities and personal jurisdiction is emerging. Courts in this district have adopted a “sliding scale” approach that divides Internet activities into three categories: (1) those in which the defendant clearly transacts business in foreign jurisdictions over the Internet; (2) those in which a defendant has posted information on the Internet, but has no further communication with potential customers .via the Internet; and (3) those in which the defendant operates an interactive web site that allows defendant and potential customers in foreign jurisdictions to communicate regarding defendant’s goods or services.
See Ty Inc. v. Clark,
Under this framework, courts can appropriately exercise personal jurisdiction over those defendants who fall into the first category by actively conducting business on the Internet.
See, e.g., CompuServe Inc. v. Patterson,
Courts cannot exercise personal jurisdiction over defendants in the second category who simply operate passive web sites that merely provide information or advertisements without more.
See, e.g., ESAB Group, Inc. v. Centricut, L.L.C.,
Courts may exercise personal jurisdiction over defendants in the third category where a user can exchange information with the host computer.
See, e.g., GTE New Media Services Inc. v. Ameritech Corp.,
Some courts have found minimum contacts through additional activities regardless of whether the activity is related to the underlying claim, considering non-web contacts as well as web pages in determining whether the defendant is subject to jurisdiction in a given state.
See, e.g., Digital Equip. Corp. v. AltaVista Tech. Inc.,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, defendants Helios Software and Helmut Tschemernjak’s motion to dismiss plaintiffs complaint as to them for lack of personal jurisdiction is GRANTED. Defendants Helios Software and Helmut Tschemernjak are dismissed from this litigation. The case between plaintiff and remaining defendant European Mikrograph Corp. is set for report on status at 10:00 a.m. on May 18, 2000.
Notes
. Plaintiff argues that
Janmark v. Reidy,
