ORDER DENYING: (1) HAIER GROUP CORPORATION’S MOTION TO DISMISS FOR LACK OF PERSONAL JURISDICTION AND FAILURE TO JOIN A NECESSARY AND INDISPENSABLE PARTY (Doc. 139); (2) BEIJING DAZHENG HUMAN LANGUAGE TECHNOLOGY ACADEMY, LTD.’S MOTION TO DISMISS FOR LACK OF PERSONAL JURISDICTION (Doc. 143); (3) BEIJING DAZHENG HUMAN LANGUAGE TECHNOLOGY ACADEMY, LTD.’S MOTION TO DISMISS OR STAY CASE FOR FORUM NON CONVENIENS (Doc. 144); AND (4) ZHENGZHOU JINHUI COMPUTER SYSTEM ENGINEERING, LTD.’S MOTION TO DISMISS FOR LACK OF PERSONAL JURISDICTION (Doc. 150)
I. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
This case concerns the alleged intentional misappropriation of computer software code belonging to Plaintiff CYBERsitter, LLC, d/b/a Solid Oak Software, by numerous Defendants in China and Taiwan. Before the Court are five separate motions: three motions to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction filed individually by Defendants Haier Group Corporation (“Haier”), Beijing Dazheng Human Language Technology Academy, Ltd. (“Dazheng”), *963 and Zhengzhou Jinhui Computer System Engineering Ltd. (“Jinhui”), (Docs. 139, 143, 150); a motion to dismiss for forum non conveniens filed by Dazheng and joined by Jinhui, (Docs. 144, 151); and a motion to dismiss for failure to join a necessary and indispensable party filed by Haier (Doc. 139). Plaintiff has opposed each of the motions. Having considered the parties’ briefs and heard oral argument, the Court DENIES each of the motions.
II. PRELIMINARY MATTERS
A. Evidentiary Objections
The parties have filed multiple evidentiary objections to numerous declarations submitted by the opposing side on various grounds, including relevancy, lack of foundation, and lack of personal knowledge. (Docs. 166, 170, 175, 185.) To the extent the Court relies on any evidence, it relies only on admissible, relevant evidence. Thus, the objections are OVERRULED.
B. Request for Judicial Notice
Plaintiff requests that the Court take judicial notice of several facts. First, as related to Defendant Haier, Plaintiff seeks judicial notice of Haier’s registered patents and trademarks in the United States, the fact that Haier allegedly has a design center located in Los Angeles and subsidiaries in New York and Delaware, the fact that Haier allegedly is an official sponsor of the National Basketball Association (“NBA”), and the fact that Haier allegedly sells its products in the Central District of California and throughout the United States at Best Buy and Wal-Mart retail stores. (Doc. 163.) Plaintiff also requests that the Court take judicial notice of such related facts as the number of teams in the NBA and the number of Best Buy and WalMart stores in the United States. Second, Plaintiff requests judicial notice of the fact that Defendants’ counsel, Alston & Bird LLP, Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP, and Reed Smith LLP, each appear on the AmLaw 100 2010 list of the highest grossing revenue law firms in the United States. Finally, Plaintiff requests that the Court take judicial notice of the supposed fact that “California is the center of the U.S. software industry.” (Id. ¶ 18.)
Defendant Jinhui objects to Plaintiffs requests for judicial notice regarding both the financial standing of their aforementioned counsel and the purported fact that California is the center of the U.S. software industry because the former is irrelevant and the latter is subject to reasonable dispute. (Doc. 169.) Defendant Haier objects to Plaintiffs request, echoing Jinhui’s concerns and arguing that Plaintiff misguidedly asks the Court to take judicial notice of statements appearing on corporate websites that are irrelevant, subject to reasonable dispute, or both. (Doc. 177.)
Under Federal Rule of Evidence 201(b), a court may only take judicial notice of a fact “not subject to reasonable dispute in that it is either (1) generally known within the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court or (2) capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.” Fed.R.Evid. 201(b). The Court takes judicial notice of Haier’s trademark and patent applications and registrations in the United States and the fact that Haier has subsidiaries located in New York and Delaware, as Haier does not dispute the existence or veracity of those facts.
(See
Doc. 163 ¶¶ 1, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9.) As to the remaining facts, however, the Court denies Plaintiffs request. For many of the facts for which Plaintiff requests judicial notice, Plaintiff submits statements or images appearing on undated, unverified websites without an accompanying declaration as to when, where, and how such images or statements were obtained. Thus, whether Haier is an official
*964
sponsor of the NBA, has a design center in Los Angeles, or sells its products in the Central District of California and throughout the United States at Best Buy and Wal-Mart retail stores is subject to reasonable dispute. Moreover, whether Defendants’ counsel appeared in the AmLaw 100 2010 list of the highest grossing revenue law firms in the United States is irrelevant to the instant motions, so the Court declines to take judicial notice of such fact.
(See
Forum Non Conveniens Order (“FNC Order”), Doc. 88, at 4 n. 3,
C. Request for Leave to Submit SurReply and Motion to Strike
Plaintiff requests leave to file a surreply alleging that Defendants submitted new evidence and relied on new legal authorities in their reply papers. (Doc. 183.) Specifically, Plaintiff asserts that Jinhui submitted new evidence in the Declaration of Jerry Liao and the attachments thereto (Doc. 168-1) and that Haier and Dazheng cited and relied heavily upon two United States Supreme Court decisions that were issued on June 27, 2011, the same day Plaintiff filed its opposition papers.
(See
Docs. 172,178.) Alternatively, Plaintiff requests the Court strike the Liao Declaration. (Doc. 185.) The Liao Declaration, however, merely rebuts evidence proffered by Plaintiff in Jenna DiPasquale’s declaration.
(See
DiPasquale Deck, Doc. 160.) Plaintiffs Motion to Strike the Liao Declaration is therefore DENIED. Nonetheless, because Defendants relied on new legal authority in their reply papers, the Court GRANTS in part and DENIES in part Plaintiffs request and admits its surreply in part.
See Zamani v. Carnes,
III. DISCUSSION
A. Forum Non Conveniens
Dazheng and Jinhui move to dismiss the action for forum non conveniens arguing that California is an inconvenient forum and the dispute should be heard in China. (Dazheng FNC Mot., Doc. 144; Jinhui’s FNC Mot., Doc. 151.) On November 18, 2010,
None of the five exceptions to law of the case doctrine arise here. Dazheng maintains, however, that notwithstanding the Court’s previous decision to retain this case in lieu of dismissing it for adjudication in China, its motion “demonstrates each of the points that the Court found wanting on [sic] Sony’s motion.” (Dazheng FNC Mot. at 1.) Dazheng asserts that, unlike Sony et al.’s motion, it has demonstrated that (1) all parties would be severely inconvenienced by trial in California because most of the Defendants’ evidence and witnesses are located in China; (2) Dazheng would suffer prejudice because it no longer employs “many” of its “crucial” witnesses and cannot compel those witnesses to testify at trial, and because having Chinese witnesses provide testimony through a translator “is vastly inferior to having a fact-finder familiar with the language,” and (3) the public’s interest would be harmed if ' this Court exercised jurisdiction over an intellectual property dispute that is premised on the distribution in China of software designed solely for the Chinese market. (Id. at 2-3.) What Dazheng and Jinhui fail to do, however, is offer any new arguments that the Court did not already consider in denying Sony et al.’s motion to dismiss for forum non conveniens.
As the Court previously noted: “Forum non conveniens is an exceptional tool to be employed sparingly, not a doctrine that compels plaintiffs to choose the optimal forum for their claim.” (FNC Order at 5 (quoting
Boston Telecomm. Grp., Inc. v. Wood, 588
F.3d 1201, 1206 (9th Cir.2009)).) “Ordinarily, a plaintiffs choice of forum will not be disturbed unless the ‘private interest’ and the ‘public interest’ factors strongly favor trial in a foreign country.”
(Id.
(quoting
Lueck v. Sundstrand Corp.,
(1) the residence of the parties and the witnesses; (2) the forum’s convenience to the litigants; (3) access to physical evidence and other sources of proof; (4) whether unwilling witnesses can be compelled to testify; (5) the cost of bringing witnesses to trial; (6) the enforceability of the judgment; and (7) all other practical problems that make trial of a case easy, expeditious and inexpensive.
(Id.
at 8 (quoting
Boston Telecomm.,
The essence of the instant motion is that because Dazheng and Jinhui, their witnesses, and their evidence are located in China, they would be severely burdened if the case were to be litigated in California rather than China due to the difficulty of compelling third-party witnesses to testify in California and the substantial cost of transporting witnesses and evidence to *966 California and translating documents from Chinese to English. (See generally Dazheng FNC Mot. 8-13; Jinhui FNC Mot. 8-12.) However, the Court rejected those arguments when it denied Sony et al.’s motion to dismiss. (Compare Docs. 49, 88, with Docs. 144,151.) Although in doing so the Court did note that Sony et al. did not reside in China, the fact that Dazheng and Jinhui reside in China does not change the outcome because the private and public factors still weigh in favor of the Court retaining the case.
As to the private factors, the Court explained, “ ‘this is a case in which witnesses are scattered around the globe’ and whether the case is tried in China or California, the parties will likely be forced to depend on deposition testimony in lieu of live testimony for at least some witnesses.’ ” (FNC Order at 10 (quoting
Boston Telecomm.,
Because Dazheng and Jinhui neither offer any reason for the Court to overturn its previous decision to retain this case, nor show that the private and public factors strongly favor trial in China, the Court does not disturb Plaintiffs choice of forum and DENIES the motion to dismiss for forum non conveniens.
B. Personal Jurisdiction
Dazheng, Haier, and Jinhui individually have moved to dismiss the action as to each of them for lack of personal jurisdiction. (Dazheng Mot., Doc. 143; Haier Mot., Doc. 141; Jinhui Mot., Doc. 150.)
1. Legal Standard
Rule 12(b)(2) allows a party to assert lack of personal jurisdiction as a defense by motion. Fed.R.Civ.P. (12)(b)(2). “Although the defendant is the moving party on a motion to dismiss [for lack of personal jurisdiction], the plaintiff bears the burden of establishing that jurisdiction exists.”
Rio Props., Inc. v. Rio Int’l Interlink,
“In evaluating the appropriateness of personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant, [courts] ordinarily examine whether such jurisdiction satisfies the ‘requirements of the applicable state long-arm statute’ and ‘comports with federal due process.’ ”
Bauman v. Daimler-Chrysler Corp.,
“There are two types of personal jurisdiction: general and specific.”
Ziegler v. Indian River Cnty.,
2. Analysis
Plaintiff argues that the Court has specific and general jurisdiction over Haier, but concedes that the Court cannot exercise general jurisdiction over Dazheng and Jinhui. (Pl.’s Opp’n, Doc. 159, at 5.) Because Plaintiff alleges specific jurisdiction over all three Defendants, the Court first addresses specific jurisdiction.
The Ninth Circuit applies a three-part test to determine whether a district court can exercise specific personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant:
(1) The nonresident defendant must purposefully direct his activities or consummate some transaction with the forum or resident thereof; or perform some act by which he purposefully avails himself of the privilege of conducting activities in the forum, thereby invoking the benefits and protections of its laws;
(2) the claim must be one which arises out of or relates to the defendant’s forum-related activities; and the exercise of jurisdiction must comport with fair play and substantial justice, i.e. it must be reasonable.
Schwarzenegger v. Fred Martin Motor Co.,
*968 a. Purposeful Availment or Direction
“The purposeful availment requirement ensures that a nonresident defendant will not be haled into court based upon ‘random, fortuitous or attenuated’ contacts with the forum state.”
Panavision Int’l, L.P. v. Toeppen,
The Ninth Circuit “evaluates purposeful direction using the three-part ‘Calder-effects’ test, taken from the Supreme Court’s decision in
Calder v. Jones,
i. Factual Allegations
Plaintiff alleges that Dazheng and Jinhui targeted Plaintiff by “obtain[ing] Plaintiffs Trade Secrets through improper means” when they co-developed the Green Dam Youth Escort program (FAC, Doc. 56, ¶ 60) and that both Dazheng and Jinhui “possessed knowledge that Plaintiff is and was a United States company and that [Defendants’] illegal acts would therefore cause injury within the United States and within California.” (Id. ¶ 62.) Plaintiff further alleges that Dazheng and Jinhui “directly infringed Plaintiffs copyrights ... by reproducing, adapting, and/or distributing works embodying the Copyrighted Works without authorization.... ” (Id. ¶ 79.) Plaintiff has submitted evidence supporting the allegation that Dazheng and Jinhui copied its works. (Halderman Decl., Doc. 62, ¶ 24.) Moreover, Plaintiff claims that Jinhui and Dazheng made available the infringing Green Dam Youth Escort program for download to individuals in the United States. (FAC ¶ 46.) Plaintiff has produced evidence that Plaintiffs code for CYBERsitter was publicly available on Jinhui’s servers at www. zzjinhui.com on or about July 2009. 2 (Mil- *969 burn Decl., Doc. 158-1, ¶ 3.) These actions were taken by Dazheng and Jinhui, according to Plaintiff, as part of a conspiracy “to steal [Plaintiffs] proprietary software, and to disseminate the illegal product to tens of millions of end users in China and elsewhere.” (Id. ¶ 5.)
Plaintiff similarly alleges that Haier “infringed Plaintiffs copyrights in the Copyrighted Works.” (FAC ¶ 92.) Plaintiff claims that Haier “conspired” with other Defendants in misappropriating Plaintiffs intellectual property by manufacturing and selling computers containing the Green Dam software in China. (FAC ¶¶ 58, 66, 67.) Plaintiff argues that Haier “targeted” Plaintiff through the “misappropriation and distribution of software code.” (PL’s Haier Opp’n, Doc. 156, at 14.) Plaintiff asserts that because “misappropriation and distribution of software code is an intentional act[,] it is by definition specifically targeted to the victim as it is impossible to steal software code without knowing whom you are stealing it from [sic].” (PL’s Haier Opp’n at 14.) Plaintiff does not allege that Haier stole the code, but that it knowingly distributed computers in China containing the alleged stolen code. Plaintiff specifically alleges that “Defendant Manufacturers,” such as Haier, “willingly participated in the PRC and Defendant Developers’ [Dazheng and Jinhui] scheme to proliferate the illegal software throughout China.” (FAC ¶ 52.) Plaintiff alleges that “[a]t the time that each Defendant Manufacturer distributed the Green Dam software, it knew or had reason to know that the Trade Secrets were obtained through unauthorized decryption of the CYBERsitter program.” (Id. ¶ 61.) As to Haier’s knowledge, Plaintiff provides proof that it sent a cease-and-desist letter to Haier on August 11, 2009 informing Haier of its alleged unauthorized distribution of Plaintiff's software code. (Fayer Decl., Doc. 161, Ex. 2.) In response to Plaintiffs letter, Haier, through its counsel, sent an email stating: “Haier has been manufacturing computers in strict accordance with laws and policies of China. The Green Dam Youth Escort [program] that we installed (or packaged) in some of Haier’s computers is legitimately acquired. Essentially, Haier Group is not the party of legal relations with regard to the copyright dispute over CYBERsitter....” (Id., Ex. 6.)
ii. Intentional Act
Plaintiff clearly satisfies the intentional act requirement as to Dazheng, Haier, and Jinhui. Courts “construe ‘intent’ in the context of the ‘intentional act’ test as referring to an intent to perform an actual, physical act in the real world, rather than an intent to accomplish a result or consequence of that act.”
Schwarzenegger,
Hi. Expressly Aimed at the Forum State
As a general principle, express aiming requires more than “ ‘untargeted negligence’ that merely happened to cause
*970
harm to [a plaintiff].”
Schwarzenegger,
Dazheng, Haier, and Jinhui assert similar arguments as to why Plaintiff has not satisfied the express aiming prong. Dazheng argues that it designed and manufactured the alleged infringing software for a Chinese market, only targeted the product to a Chinese audience, and never had a physical presence in California. 3 (Dazheng Mot. at 7-9.) While denying that it manufactured or distributed the computers in question, Haier similarly argues that even if it had conducted such activity, it would have occurred only in China. (Haier Mot. at 6.) Jinhui likewise asserts that it did not perform any of the alleged acts in California, nor did it target Plaintiff in California. (Jinhui Mot. at 10, 12.) Relying on Schwarzenegger and Brayton, Jinhui also argues that express aiming requires more than individualized targeting at Plaintiff and knowledge of Plaintiffs residence. (Jinhui Reply, Doc. 168, at 8.)
Taking these arguments together and focusing on Jinhui’s reliance on
Schwarzenegger
and
Brayton,
Defendants converge on the position that express aiming did not occur because, even if Plaintiffs allegations are true, Defendants did nothing above and beyond willfully infringing Plaintiffs copyright with the knowledge that Plaintiff resided in California. Defendants contend that they did not distribute or market their allegedly infringing products in California,
see Schwarzenegger,
As the Ninth Circuit has recognized,
“Calder
stands for the proposition that purposeful availment is satisfied even by a defendant whose only ‘contact’ with the forum state is the ‘purposeful direction’ of a
foreign
act having
effect
in the forum state.”
Dole Food Co.,
Moreover, the facts in
Schwarzenegger
and
Brayton
are readily distinguishable from the facts in the present case. In
Schwarzenegger,
a car dealership in Ohio placed an advertisement in a local newspaper featuring the image of a famous movie character whose owner happened to reside in California. Here, a software developer alleges that foreign software developers and computer manufacturers intentionally stole its copyrighted software — the very basis of its business — and conspired to distribute it to Chinese-speaking customers throughout China and the United States. In the former case, it may “offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice” to hale the Ohio car dealership into a California court to answer for its alleged wrongs in Ohio, considering the scope of the defendant’s conduct and the perceived harm to plaintiff.
Int’l Shoe,
Furthermore, the alleged conduct in
Brayton
centered on defendant’s maintenance of a passive website, which the Ninth Circuit has treated differently for purposes of personal jurisdiction.
Brayton,
Moreover, the Ninth Circuit in
Columbia Pictures
relied on
Calder
to hold that an allegation of willful copyright infringement knowingly directed at a forum resident “alone” is sufficient to satisfy purposeful availment.
Columbia Pictures,
Taking Plaintiffs allegations as true and resolving conflicts between declarations in Plaintiffs favor, Plaintiff has stated facts sufficient to make a prima facie showing that Dazheng, Haier, and Jinhui expressly aimed their conduct at Plaintiff knowing that it resided in California.
See Panavision Int’l, L.P. v. Toeppen,
iv. Harm Likely To Be Suffered In the Forum State
To satisfy this prong, “the ‘brunt’ of the harm need not be suffered in the forum state,” but only “a jurisdictionally sufficient amount of harm.”
Yahoo! Inc.,
b. Arising Out Of ForuntrRelated Activities
The second requirement for specific personal jurisdiction is that plaintiffs action arises out of or relates to the defendant’s forum-related activities.
Schwarzenegger,
c. Reasonableness
Because Plaintiff satisfied the first two elements for specific jurisdiction, the burden shifts to Dazheng, Haier, and Jinhui to “ ‘present a compelling ease’ that the exercise of jurisdiction would not be reasonable.”
Schwarzenegger,
(1) the extent of a defendant’s purposeful interjection; (2) the burden on the defendant in defending in the forum; (3) the extent of conflict with the sovereignty of the defendant’s state; (4) the forum state’s interest in adjudicating the dispute; (5) the most efficient judicial resolution of the controversy; (6) the importance of the forum to the plaintiffs interest in convenient and effective relief; and (7) the existence of an alternative forum.
Id.
(citing
Core-Vent Corp. v. Nobel Indus. AB,
Haier does not address reasonableness. As to Dazheng and Jinhui, the above-referenced factors overlap substantially with the factors the Court already considered in denying Dazheng’s and Jinhui’s motion to dismiss for forum non conveniens and Sony et al.’s prior motion to dismiss for forum non conveniens. Indeed, to the extent that Dazheng and Jinhui argue that the exercise of personal jurisdiction over them would be unreasonable, they assert the same arguments that appear in their motion to dismiss for forum non conveniens.
(Compare
Docs. 144, 151,
with
Doc. 143 at 10-12 and Doc. 150 at 14-1.) The only new factor is that of “purposeful interjection,” which “is analogous to the purposeful direction analysis discussed above.”
Sinatra v. Nat’l Enquirer, Inc.,
C. Failure to Join a Necessary Indispensable Party!Sovereign Immunity
Haier moves to dismiss the action in its entirety because a necessary and indispensable party — the People’s Republic of China (“PRC”) — is immune from this suit. (Haier Mot. at 1, 8-21.) Assuming without deciding that the PRC is a necessary and indispensable party, the PRC is not immune from this suit, and is thus properly joined, because the commercial activity exception to the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (“FSIA”), 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(2), applies.
On December 13, 2010, Plaintiff filed a motion for entry of default against the PRC. (Doc. 93.) In response, the Court stayed the motion and ordered Plaintiff to show cause as to why the PRC is not immune from this action under the FSIA. (Doc. 96.) Plaintiff subsequently filed a response to the OSC, arguing that the commercial activity and tortious conduct exceptions to the FSIA applied to the PRC’s actions. (Doc. 100.) Satisfied that the PRC actions fell within the commercial activity exception, the Court entered default against the PRC, but did not explain its reasoning. (Doc. 103.) Here, Plaintiff again contends that the PRC’s alleged acts fall within commercial activity and tortious conduct exceptions to the FSIA. Because the Court concludes that the commercial activity exception applies, it need not ad *975 dress whether the tortious conduct exception does as well.
The FSIA “provides the sole basis for federal jurisdiction” over claims against a foreign state and its instrumentalities, and “creates a statutory presumption that a foreign state and its instrumentalities are immune from suit unless one of the specific exceptions enumerated in sections 1605 through 1607 of the Act applies.”
Exp. Grp. v. Reef Indus., Inc.,
A foreign state shall not be immune from the jurisdiction of courts of the United States or of the States in any case ... in which the action is based upon a commercial activity carried on in the United States by the foreign state; or upon an act performed in the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere; or upon an act outside the territory of the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere and that act causes a direct effect in the United States.
28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(2). As it did in its response to the OSC, Plaintiff relies on the third clause of § 1605(a)(2) — “an act outside the territory of the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere and that act causes a direct effect in the United States” — in arguing that the commercial activities exception applies. This requires the Court to find that Plaintiffs action is (1) based upon an act that occurred outside the United States; (2) that was taken “in connection with a commercial activity” of the PRC outside this country; and (3) that “cause[d] a direct effect in the United States.”
Adler v. Fed. Rep. of Nigeria,
1. In Connection with a Commercial Activity
The “in connection with a commercial activity” prong requires the Court “to make two distinct inquiries: (1) whether [the PRC] engaged in a commercial activity; and (2) whether the acts complained of were made ‘in connection with’ that activity.”
Adler,
Plaintiff alleges that the PRC “engaged in the purely economic conduct of licensing, sublicensing, distributing, and promoting the software program known as Green Dam at issue in this litigation.” (FAC ¶ 13.) Specifically, the PRC allegedly paid Jinhui and Dazheng approximately $6.9 million for a one-year license to distribute the Green Dam program, and then charged licensing fees to computer manufacturers and others for their use of the Green Dam program. (Id. ¶ 33.) Plaintiff alleges that pursuant to its license from Jinhui and Dazheng, the PRC “has made the Green Dam program available for free downloading worldwide on the Internet, including on its own official site, as well as on many other privately owned Internet sites,” and that the “PRC has encouraged downloading of the program by Chinese speakers worldwide, including through propaganda.” (Id. ¶ 34.)
Taking Plaintiffs allegations as true, the PRC’s purchase of the licensing and distribution rights to the Green Dam program and subsequent sublicensing of the program to manufactures were commercial acts.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1603(d). Clearly, entities other than a sovereign state can purchase licenses for software programs and, in turn, sublicense such programs to other actors. Whether the PRC conducted this business for a governmental purpose is irrelevant.
Weltover,
Further, Plaintiffs claims are based upon acts “in connection with” the PRC’s commercial activity. “To satisfy the ‘in connection with’ requirement, the acts complained of must have some ‘substantive connection’ or a ‘causal link’ to the commercial activity.”
Adler,
2. Direct Effects
“A foreign state that engages in commercial activity may still be immune unless the action had a direct effect on a plaintiff ... occur[ing] in the United States.”
Meadows v. Dom. Rep.,
Here, Plaintiff alleges that the PRC intentionally misappropriated Plaintiffs copyrighted software by licensing, sublicensing, and distributing the Green Dam program. Because the locus of that injury occurred at Plaintiffs principal place of business in California, the PRC’s actions had a direct effect in the United States.
See Panavision,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the aforementioned reasons, the Court DENIES the motion to dismiss for forum non conveniens filed by Dazheng and joined by Jinhui; DENIES the motions to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction filed individually by Haier, Dazheng, and Jinhui; and DENIES the motion to dismiss for failure to join a necessary and indispensable party filed by Haier.
Notes
. Indeed, Dazheng submitted the same declarations from expert Jacques deLisle in support of its motion that accompanied Sony et ah's motion. (Docs. 51, 72-1, 145.)
. Jinhui argues that it never made the Green Dam Youth Escort program available for download on its websites. (Jinhui Reply, Doc. 168, at 6; Zhao Decl., Doc. 150-1, ¶ 6.) However, Plaintiff has provided a declaration from Brian Milburn, Plaintiff's President and Chief Executive Officer, stating that he discovered CYBERsitter code on Jinhui’s website at www.zzjinhui.com in July 2009. (Milburn Deck, Doc. ¶ 3.) The parties also dispute whether a website, www.lssw365.net, belonged to Jinhui and whether it contained links to download the Green Dam program entitled "New York” and "San Francisco.”
(See
DiPasquale Deck, Doc. 160, ¶ 4;
see generally
Liao Deck, Doc. 168-1.) Because the "conflicts between the facts contained in the parties’ affidavits must be resolved in [the plaintiff's] favor,”
Rio Props.,
. In its motion, Dazheng fails to apply the Calder effects test, and instead argues why it did not "purposely avail” itself of the privilege of conducting business in California.
