OPINION
This еase involves a clash between two important national policies and interests. On the one hand, there is the need to protect and reward copyright owners for creating valuable intellectual property— here, original television programming. On the other hand, it is important to promote competition and ensure broad public access to'diverse television programming. When enacting the Copyright Act of 1976, specifically the compulsory license regime prescribed in 17 U.S.C. § I'll, Congress struck a delicate balance between these two important interests. It is up to this Court to interpret and apply that balance to determine whether, a service that' engages in Internet retransmission of over-the-air television programming violates the Copyright Act.
Defendant FiimOn X, LLC (formerly known as Aereokiller LLC) operates a service that captures the signals of multiple television channels that are . broadcast over-the-air and streams them over , the Internet to the public. 1 FiimOn X assigns *6 an individual user the content stream from one of thousands of minute, dime-sized antennas that it operates in major metropolitan areas, including Washington, D.C. As a result, this service allows viewers to watch over-the-air television programming on any computer or digital device. Plaintiffs, 2 a group of television broadcasters and programmers that own much of the streamed content, sued FilmOn X, its affiliates, 3 and CEO Alkiviades David (collectively Defendants) for retransmitting their copyrighted works without a license. See Second Am. Compl. [Dkt. '66]. Plaintiffs claim that Defendants have violated their intellectual property rights, particularly the exclusive right to public performance of their copyrighted programming. See id. ¶¶ 39-47.
On Sеptember 5, 2013, this Court held that FilmOn X’s conduct likely violated Plaintiffs’ exclusive rights and preliminarily enjoined , FilmOn X and its affiliates from streaming Plaintiffs’ broadcast programming without authorization.
See Fox Television Stations, Inc. v. FilmOn X LLC,
Although Defendants had expressly disclaimed the argument that they are “cable systems” within the meaning of § 111, they now rely on the Supreme Court’s analogy in Aereo III to amend their answers. Compare David Decl. in Supp. of Opp’n to Mot. for Prelim. Inj. [Dkt. 31-1] (Prelim, Inj. David Decl.), Ex. B at 13 (CEO David stating that FilmOn X “is not a'Cable system”) with Answers to Am. Cbmpl. [Dkts. 69 and 70]'(raising affirmative defense that Defendants are entitled to compulsory license under § 111(c)). Defendants now argue that they are entitled to a § 111 compulsory license to retransmit Plaintiffs’ broadcast programming as a cable system. Id. at 8-9. Plaintiffs move for summary judgment, arguing that Defendants’ nearly-simultaneous and time-delayed retransmission' services violate the Copyright Act and that Defendants are not entitled to a §111 license. Pis.’ Mot. for *7 Partial Summ. J. [Dkt...81] (Pis.’ Mot.). Defendants cross-move for summary judgment on their counterclaim that they are entitled to such statutory license and -they also contend that it is premature to decide whether Plaintiffs’ exclusive rights of public performance were actually infringed in the past. Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. [Dkt. 97] (Defs.’ Mot.).
Upon consideration of the parties’ briefs and for the reasons stated in this Opinion, this Court holds that Defendants are not entitled to a § 111 license. Section 111(f)(3) defines cable systems as physical facilities that both receive and retransmit broadcast signals to paying subscribers ..through wires, cables, microwave, and other types of communication channels. FilmOn X is not such a facility because it relies on the Internet, which is neither a tangible nor physical entity, to retransmit , the broadcast signals to its paying subscribers. The Court also holds that FilmOn X infringed Plaintiffs’ exclusive right of public performance in violation of the Copyright Act. 4 As such, this Court will grant Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment in part and deny Defendants’ motion.
I. FACTS
A. Prior Litigation
-In October 2010, a group of broadcasters and television networks, including some of the Plaintiffs, sued Defendant Fil-mOn.com, Inc. for copyright infringement in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.
See
Pis.’ Rfeq. for Jud. Notice [Dkt. 90] (“Pis.’ RJN”), Ex. A (Mot. for TRO). Defendant FilmOn.com, Inc., which essentially streamed over the Internet the signals of various broadcast television stations on a live basis, argued that it was a cable system entitled to a § 111 license.
Id.,
Ex. B (FilmOn Opp’n to Mot. for TRO) at 5. The district court (Buchwald, J.) disagreed and granted a temporary restraining order enjoining Fil-mOn.com, Inc. from streaming copyrighted programming.
Id.,
Ex. C. (TRO). In a companion case, Judge Buchwald also held that an Internet-based retransmission service was not a “cable system” and, thus, was not entitled to a § 111 license.
WPIX, Inc. v. ivi, Inc.,
In August 2012, Mr. David launched a new Internet-based retransmission service called FilmOn X. David Dep. [Dkt. 93-3], Ex. 1 at 58:3-21. Like FilmOn.com, Inc., this new service streamed broadcast television signals over the Internet without payment or authorization. Unlike the prior system, FilmOn X relied on a mini-antenna/data video recorder technology - that provided viewers with both time-delayed and nearly simultaneous retransmissions of copyrighted content. David Deck in Supp. of Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. [Dkt. Ill] (Siimm. J. David Deck) ¶¶ 12, 16. Unlike FilmOn.com, Inc., FilmOn X explicitly disclaimed that it was a cable system entitled to a compulsory license. Prelim. Inj. David Deck, Ex. B, at 13. In fact, FilmOn X’s service was specifically designed to ayoid copyright liability under
*8
then-applicable Second Circuit precedent in
Cartoon Network LP, LLLP v. CSC Holdings, Inc.,
On July 22, 2012, the Southern District of New York (Nathan, J.) applied
Cablevision
to hold that the use of a separate small antenna and separate data stream” for each subscriber did not violate the Copyright Act.
Am. Broad. Cos. v. Aereo, Inc.,
Shortly after Judge Wu enjoined.Defendants, the Second Circuit affirmed Judge Nathan’s' decision in
Aereo I. WNET, Thirteen v. Aereo, Inc.,
■ On June 25, 2014, the Supreme Court issued its decision in
Aereo III,
reversing the Second Circuit’s decision, resolving the split, and validating this Court’s reasoning.
In the wake of
Aereo III,
Defendants, like Aereo on remand, switched their theories and amended their answers to articulate a new position — namely, that they are entitled to a.§ 111 compulsory license to retransmit Plaintiffs’ television programming. Answers , to Am. Compl. [Dkts. 69 and 70]. In New York, they argued that the Supreme Court’s analogy to cable systems in
Aereo III
meant that the Copy
*9
right Act authorized the streaming of copyrighted content so long as the retransmission service complied with the requirements listed in § 111.
See
Pis.’ RJN, Ex. F. at . 9-10
(CBS Broad. Inc. v. FilmOn. com, Inc.,
No. 10-cv-7532,
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment in the California action before Judge Wu as to whether Defendants are entitled to a § 111 license to retransmit Plaintiffs’ broadcasts without infringing their copyrights. On July 24, 2015, Judge Wu found that FilmOn X’s service qualifies as a “cable system” entitled to a § 111 compulsory license and granted summary judgment in favor of Defendants.
Fox Television Stations, Inc. v. Aereokiller,
In this suit, Plaintiffs note that Fil-mOn.com, Inc. already litigated its § 111 defense unsuccessfully in the New York action. Pls.’ Mem. in Supp. for Summ. J. [Dkt. 92-1] (Pls.’ Mem.) at 9-10. Plaintiffs contend the doctrine, of res judicata precludes FilmOn X and. its co-defendants from re-litigating the same issue. Id. Even if res judicata does not apply, Plaintiffs ask this Court to adopt the reasoning in ivi II and Aereo IV»and defer to the Copyright Office’s longstanding position that § 111 - does not apply to .Internet-based retransmission services. Id. at 12-20. Defendants argue that this Court should reject-the Copyright Office’s interpretation of § 111 and adopt the reasoning in Judge Wu’s recent California decision. Defs.’ Mem. in Supp. for Summ j. Dkt. (Defs.’ Mem.) at 14-23; Defs,’ Suppl. Mem. in Opp’n to Pis.’ Mot. for Summ. J. [Dkt. 119] (Defs.’ Suppl. Mem.). •
B; Broadcast Programming and Fil-mOn X’s Service 7
Plaintiffs own copyrights to certain local news broadcasts and nationally-broadcast television programs. Local television stations broаdcast the programming' over the public airwaves subject to the rules of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Once these signals are broadcast “over-the-air,” cable systems, satellite services, and other multichannel video programming distributors (MVPDs) retrans *10 mit the signals to the public and pay-specified amounts in order to do so.
FilmOn X operated a website that combined the functions of a television and a digital video recorder (DVR). Through'this website, viewers could access original and licensed content, as well as over-the-air broadcast programming. In August 2012, FilmOn X launched its service in Los An-geles and then expanded to various cities across the United States, including Washington, D.C. In order to retransmit broadcast programming over the Internet, Fil-mOn X used a remote mini-antenna/DVR technology. As part of the technology, Fil-mOn X used one master antenna located on the roof of a commercial data center. 8 Its centers were physical facilities across the country, which contained the necessary electronic equipment to capture, store, and retransmit broadcast programming. The master antenna transmitted signals to an antenna box and mini-antennas, in turn, captured the amplified signals. [Redacted]
Whenever a viewer wished to access a program being broadcast, the viewer would go to FilmOn X’s website and select the show from a list of supposed local programming. [Redacted] Ás a result, no single antenna was used by more than one viewer at the same time. Once the mini-antenna received the signal, the data of the selected program was transmitted to the antenna router and then to the video encoder. The encoder stored the data on Fil-mOn X’s hard drive in a “unique directory” created, for 'the specific viewer. The encoder converted the signals into a viewable format arid then streamed the data over the Internet to FilmOn X’s website through a distribution endpoint and hence to the viewer. The data in the “unique directory” was only deleted after the viewer finished watching the program or selected a different program to watch.
Through this technology, the viewer could watch live television on a digital device through FilmOn X’s nearly simultaneous retransmission of the selected program; the viewer could also select a program to watch at a later time. 9 In the past, FilmOn X charged for both monthly and annual local channel packages. Paying subscribers could watch live television in high definition (HD) and select shows for later viewing. FilmOn X would occasionally offer free trials of [¶] television. FilmOn X also offered viewers live standard-television for free. In addition, FilmOn X modified' the broadcast program in various ways, such as inserting its logo during the retransmission, omitting closed captioning, and playing a short ten to thirty-second video advertisement prior to the program’s streaming. 10
*11 C. FilmOn X’s Efforts to Operate as a Cable System
FilmOn X has recently modified its service in an effort to bring it into compliance with § 111 requirements; it has also expressed that it is ready to recommence retransmissions as a cable systém. Summ. J. David Decl. ¶ 28; Meldal Decl.' ¶¶ 19-52. FilmOn X specifies that its users will only be able to watch broadcast programs if they purchase local channel subscription packages, which will be limited to those television channels available in a designated market area. Meldal Decl. ¶ 35. FilmOn X has developed a geolocation system to deny access to broadcast programming unless the viewer’s digital device is located within the original broadcast’s market area at the time of the retransmission. 11 Id. ¶¶ 19-52; see also Summ. J. David Decl. ¶ 33 [Redacted] Finally. FilmOn X explains that it intends to retransmit over-the-air broadcasts with closed captioning and without its logo. Summ J. David Decl. ¶ 36-37.
[Redacted]
In addition to modifying its service, Fil-mOn X has attempted to comply with § 111 requirements by making past royalty payments and filing Statements of Account with the Copyright Office for each of the six-month reporting periods since July 1, 2012. In a July 2014 letter, the Copyright Office informed FilmOn X that it does not consider Internet-based retransmission systems to be'§ 111 cable systems. App’x of Copyright Office [Dkt. 91], Ex. 1 (July 23, 2014 Copyright Office Letter) at 1-2 (footnotes omitted). Nonetheless, the Copyright Office explained that given that “the question of eligibility of [I]ntemet-based retransmission services for the Section 111 license appears to have been raised again before the courts,” the Office would accept FilniOn X’s documentation on a “provisional basis.” Id.
II. LEGAL STANDARD
- Under Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, summary judgment shall be granted “if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a);
accord Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
When' evaluating cross-motions for summary judgment, each motion is reviewed “separately on its own- merits to determine whether [any] of the parties deserves judgment as a matter of law.”
Family Trust of Mass., Inc. v. United States,
III. ANALYSIS'
A. The Copyright Act of 1976
Copyright law protects copyright owners from the infringement of any of their six exclusive rights under § 106.
See
2013 D.C. Preliminary Injunction,
Under the Copyright Act of 1909, CATF retransmissions of over-the-air signals did not .constitute public performances and, thus, did not infringe the owners’ exclusive right of public performance.
See Fortnightly Corp. v. United Artists Television, Inc.,
As part of the 1976 amendments to the Copyright Act, Congress enacted the Transmit Clause, which defines a public performance as to:
transmit or otherwise communicate a performance ... of the [copyrighted] work ... to the public, by means of any device or process, whether the members of the public capable of receiving the performance ... receive it in the same place or in separate places and at the same time or at different times.
17, U.S.C. § 101.
12
In other- words, any unauthorized public transmission of copy
*13
righted content infringes the owners’ exclusive right of public performance. Consequently, the amendments “redefined the term performance to include such secondary transmissions [by CATV companies], creating potential copyright liability for cable systems and carriers involved in such transmissions.”
Hubbard Broad., Inc. v. S. Satellite Sys., Inc.,
’ Congress did not stop there. It also enacted a compulsory licensing framework in § 111(c) to allow “cable TV systems to retransmit the copyrighted programming of distant broadcast stations in return for certain royalty payments.” Id.; see also 1976 H.R. Rep., at 88 (explaining that § 111(c) is clearly “directed at the operation of cable television systems and the terms and conditions of their liability for the retransmission of copyrighted ,works”).
Section 111(c)(1) provides:
[Secondary transmissions 13 to the .public by a cable system of a performance or display of a work embodied in a primary transmission.made by the,Federal Communications Commission ..... shall be subject to statutory licensing upon compliance with the requirements of subsection (d) where the carriagе of the signals comprising the secondary transmission is permissible under the rules, regulations,- or authorizations of. the Federal Communications Commission.
§' 111(c)(1).
14
It follows from, the clear text that cable systems may “retransmit to their customers any primary transmissions made by a broadcast station licensed by the [FCC]” so long as: (1) the retransmission is permissible under FCC rules, regulations, and authorizations; and (2) the cable systems “pay a fee, to be distributed to the copyright owners as surrogate for the royalties for which they might have 'negotiated under a pure market scheme,”
See Cablevision Sys. Dev. Co. v. Motion Picture Ass’n of Am., Inc.,
a facility, located in any State, territory, trust territory, or possession of the United States, that in whole or in part receives signals transmitted -or programs broadcast by one or more .television broadcast stations licensed by the Federal Communications Commission, and makes secondary transmissions of such signals or programs by wires, cables, microwave, or other communications channels to subscribing members of the public who pay for such service. For purposes of determining the royalty fee under subsection (d)(1), two or more cable systems in contiguous communities under common ownership or control or *14 operating from one headend shall be considered as one system.-
§ 111(f)(3). This definition gives rise to the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment concerning Defendants’ § 111(c) affirmative defense and counterclaim.
B. Aereo III Decision
Aereo III
considered a system that is virtually identical to that of FilmOn X.
The Supreme Court highlighted Aereo’s “overwhelming likeness” to CATV companies as it compared the “turn of the knob” of old television sets to the “click on a website” of modern internet-based.retransmission services. Id. The Court also stated that any technological differences between CATV systems and Aereo were “invisible to subscriber and broadcaster alike.” Id. As such, the Court held that, insofar as there are differences in their respective technologies, “those differences are not adequate to place Aereo’s activities outside the scope of the Act.” Id. at 2511.
C. Section 111(c) Affirmative Defense and Counterclaim
Defendants seek a declaratory ruling that FilmOn X’s unauthorized Internet-based retransmissions do not infringe Plaintiffs’ copyrights because FilmOn X is a “cable system” that qualifies for a § 111(c) compulsory license. Defs.’ Mot. for Súrnm. J. [Dkt. 97]. Consequently, the question here is whether FilmOn X is a cable, system in light of the analogies in Aereo III and the text of § 111(c).
1. Res Judicata
Plaintiffs first argue that the doctrine of
res judicata
precludes Defendants from re-litigating their defense and counterclaim. Pis.’ Mem. at 16-17. Specifically, Plaintiffs contend that Defendants had a “full and fair opportunity to litigate” precisely this issue — -whether they are entitled to a § 111 compulsory license.
Id.
(citing
Taylor v. Sturgell,
The argument is misplaced. Under the doctrine of
res
judicata, an earlier suit would preclude subsequent actions only if there is an .“(l) an identity of the cause of action in-both suits; (2) identity of the parties in both suits; and (3) a final judgment on the ■ merits by a court of competent jurisdiction.”
Velikonja v. Ash
*15
croft,
The instant case does nob involve the same transaction or share the same nucleus of facts as the New York action because Defendants launched FilmOn X’s service after the 2012 Injunction was entered. The technology and service challenged in the New York action did not involve the mini-antenna/DVR technology at stake here.
See
David Decl. ¶¶ 6-9. It also did not involve time-delayed retransmissions of the copyrighted content.
See id.
In fact, FilmOn X’s service was-’ specifically designed to avoid copyright liability under then applicable Second Circuit precedent.
See Maharaj,
The Court also notes that Plaintiffs opted to bring actions in California and D.C. to challenge FilmOn X’s service, as opposed to again enforcing the 2012 Injunction in New York. Consequently, it cannot be said that the earlier action, which did not involve the same technology, arid facts, precludes Defendants from arguing now that FilmOn X is a cable system entitled to a statutory license. Furthermore, Plaintiffs’
res judicata
argument contradicts their view that § 111 should not be interpreted in a technology-agnostic manner. If technological differences matter for purposes of determining what is a cable system under § 111, it necessarily follows that Judge Buchwald’s rejection of Fil-mOn.corii, Inc’s § 111 defense does not bar Defendants from raising the same defense with respect to FilmOn X’s technology. Finally, Defendants’ position that
Aereo III
undermines and- calls -into question Judge Buchwald’s decision in the New York action is another reason why Plaintiffs’
res judicata
argufnerit should be rejected.
See State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co. v. Duel,
2. Aereo III and the § 111 Defense
The parties agree that the issue addressed in
Aereo III
was whether Aereo’s Internet-based retransmissions constituted public performances for purposes of the Transmit Clause, but not whether Aereo was a cable company for purposes of § 111(c). Nonetheless, Defendants contend that the Supreme Court’s reasoning in
Aereo III
is instructive and relevant to deciding whether FilmOn X’s service is a cable system under the Copyright Act. Defendants further suggest that
Aereo III
embraces a technоlogy-agnostic interpretation of the 1976 amendments and the Copyright Act as a whole. To support this proposition, Defendants rely on the fact that the Supreme Court highlighted the “overwhelming likeness” between Aereo’s service and that of CATV systems and dismissed technological differences on the
*16
basis that they were “invisible to subscriber . and broadcaster alike.”
See Aereo III,
134 -S.Ct. at 2507. Defendants argue that the Court's reasoning implies that no technological difference between FilmOn X and cable, companies matters for purposes of the § 111 licensing scheme. In other words, if an Internet-based retransmission service is “substantially similar to” and “for all practical purposes a traditional cable system[,]” then it must be that FilmOn X’s service qualifies as a cable system under § 111.
See
2015 California decision,
As Defendants recognize, the Supreme Court analyzed Aereo’s activities only for purposes of the Transmit Clause. Therefore, any analogy' to cable companies should be interpreted in that particular context. More than that, however, Defendants over-read Aereo III. The Court does not agree that the Supreme Court adopted a technology-agnostic interpretation of the Transmit Clause, let alone the Copyright Act as a whole. It specifically stated:
In other cases involving different kinds of service or. technology providers,-a user’s involvement in the operation of the provider’s equipment and selection of the content transmitted may well bear on whether the. provider performs within the -meaning of the Act. But the many similarities between Aereo and cable companies, considered in light of Congress’ basic purposes in amending the Copyright Act, convince us-that this difference is not critical here. We conclude that Aereo is not just an equipment supplier and that Aereo “perform[s].”
Aereo III,
Further, even if the Supreme Court intended to adopt a technology-agnostic approach for the Transmit Clause in
Aereo III,
such an approach should not be extended to the § 111 licensing scheme. The Court’s underlying reasoning when it disregarded the technological differences between. Aereo and cable' companies was that those differences were “invisible to subscriber and broadcaster alike.”
Aereo III,
Unlike the definition of a cable system in § 111(f)(3), the text , of the Transmit Clause supports such a broad reading. Compare 17 U.S.C. § 101 (referring in broad terms to transmissions or communications made “by means of any device or process” regardless of whether the public receives them “in the same place or in separate places and at the same time or at different times”) (emphasis added) with Id. § 111(f)(3) (requiring that a cable system be a physical “facility” capable of receiving broadcast signals and retransmitting them to subscribers through specific means, such as “wires, cables, microwave, or other communications channels”). Accordingly, this Court rejects Defendants’ argument that Aereo III stands for the proposition that courts should embrace a technology-agnostic interpretation of the Copyright Act in all respects. In fact, Aereo III itself rejects Defendants’ view.
Finally, Defendants direct this Court’s attention to the Justices’ discussion at oral argument. Defs.’ Mem. at 17-18. Specifically, Defendants rely on Justice Sotomay'or’s questioning whether the Court could avoid a ruling on the Transmit Clause by finding that Aereo was a cable company entitled to a compulsory license.
Id.
Defendants also rely on Justice Breyer’s alleged “concern” that excluding Aer-eo from the compulsory licensing system would limit the public’s access to copyrighted works.
Id.
According to Defendants, these sporadic comments at oral argument are instructive as to whether Internet-based retransmission services, such as FilmOn X, are entitled to a § 111 license. There are three probláms with Defendants’ argument. First, Aereo never argued before the Supreme Court that it was a cable system entitled to a statutory license.
See, e.g.,
Brief for Respondent,
Aereo III,
3. Definition of a Cable System under § 111(f)(3)
While
Aereo III
did not endorse a technology-agnostic interpretation of § 111, this Court must still determine whether the provision’s plain statutory text
*18
could support such an interpretation. Specifically, the question before this Court is whether FilmOn X satisfies the statutory definition of a “cable system” under § 111(f)(3). In answering this question, the Court must give effect to the definition’s meaning “as written.”
Est. of Cowart v. Nicklos Drilling Co.,
The definition of a cable system can be divided into five elements:
(1) a facility, (2) located in any State, Territory, Trust Territory, or Possession, that (3) in whole or in part receives signals transmitted or programs broadcast by one or more television broadcast stations licensed by the Federal Communications Commission, and (4) makes secondary transmissions of such signals or programs by wires, cables, micro- ' wave, or other communications channels (5) to subscribing members of the public who pay for such service.
§ 111(f)(3) (numbers not in original). 16 Defendants offer various reasons as to why FilmOn X fits squarely within the plain definition of a “cable system.” First, they argue that the definition is completely indifferent as to the mode of retransmission technology used. Second, Defendants com tend that the definition’s reference to “oth *19 er communications channels” shows that Congress intended the Copyright Act to be construed broadly. According to Defendants, § 111(f)(3) relies on broad and technology-agnostic language to cover new technologiеs, such as Internet-based retransmission services. Finally, Defendants assert that FilmOn X satisfies each definitional element because it: (1) has physical facilities in various states; (2) receives over-the-air broadcast signals from FCC-licensed stations; (3) makes secondary transmissions over the Internet, which" involves delivering the video content through coaxial cables, fiber-optic cables, microwave links, and other communication- channels; and (4) provides the service-to subscribing members of the public who pay for it. Id. at 16. •• :
There are problems, however, with Defendants’ argument. Defendants conveniently separate § lll(f)(3)’s definitional elements to avoid the plain language of the provision. According to the definition, cable systems are physical far cilities that both receive and retransmit broadcast signals to subscribers. The text makes clear that the physical facility must do two things: (1) “receive[ ] signals transmitted or programs broadcast by one or more television broadcast stations licensed by the [FCC], and (2) make[ ] secondary transmissions of such signals or programs by wires, cables, microwave, or other communications channels to subscribing members of the public who pay for such service.” 17 U.S.C. § 111(f)(3) (emphasis added). FilmOn X, however, is not this type of “facility.”
While FilmOn X does have physical facilities with dime-sized antennas that capture broadcast signals, it ultimately relies on the Internet to deliver video content to the subscriber.
See, e.g.,
Summ. J. David Decl. ¶¶ 22-26; Meldal Deck ¶¶ 16-18. Unlike FilmOnX, cable companies have a control center known as “headend,” from which they both receive the signals and directly retransmit them by coaxial cable, wires, or microwave links to their subscribers.
See ivi II,
FilmOn X is able to complete the transmission over the Internet because “hurt-dreds of thousands of separate operators of computers and computer networks independently decided to use common data transfer protocols to exchange communications' and information with other computers ...”
ACLU v. Reno,
The Internet is not a physical “facility[ ] located in any State.” 17 U.S.C. § 111(f)(3). It is not even .a “physical or tangible entity .... ”
Reno I,
929 F.Supp.
*20
at 830. Instead, the Internet is a “global network of millions of interconnected’computers” that provides for the distribution of content worldwide,
ivi II,
In .addition to the plain language of § 111(f)(3), the Court finds support for its reading of the cable system definition in the treatment of satellite carriers. In 1988, a district-court held that a satellite-broadcaster was not a “cable system” for purposes of § 111.
See Pacific & Southern Co. v. Satellite Broadcast Networks, Inc.,
Thereafter, in
Satellite
.
Broad. & Commc’ns Ass’n of Am. v. Oman,
the Eleventh Circuit held that the regulations reasonably interpreted the Copyright Act and constituted “valid exercises of the Copyright Office’s statutory authority to interpret the provisions of the compulsory licensing scheme.”
The Court recognizes that the physical layer through which the Internet can deliver video content may include cables, wires, and microwaves. See Meldal Decl. ¶¶ 9,17-18. Nonetheless, it is also true that the Internet does not deliver video content exclusively through coaxial cables, fiber-optic cables, and microwave links. The Internet also relies on multiple other types of distribution media, such as satellite, cellular networks, and Wi-Fi. Cable systems in 1976 transmitted broadcast signals exclusively through wires and cables and served on average only 2-3'communities. See 1976 H.R. Rep., at 88. Precisely because these 1976 cable companies used wires and cables, they controlled the entire-transmission path leading directly to the subscribers. The same cannot be said of Internet-based retransmission services.
FilmOn X’s service uses a myriad of distribution media that ultimately deliver content via a global network of interconnected computers ovеr which it has no control. The content that eventually reaches the paying subscriber “could travel any of a number of routes to its destination.”
Reno I,
[A] message sent from a computer in Washington, D.C. to a computer in Palo Alto, California, might first be sent to a computer in Philadelphia, and'then be forwarded to a computer in Pittsburgh, and then to Chicago, Denver and Salt Lake City, before - finally reaching Palo Alto. If the message could not travel along that path (because of a military attack, simple technical malfunction, or other reason), the message would automatically (without human intervention or even knowledge) be re-routed, perhaps, from Washington D.C. to Richmond, and then to Atlanta, New Orleans, Dallas, Albuquerque; Los Angeles, and finally to Palo Alto.
Id.
at 832. As the Internet continues to grow and expand, it becomes more evident that “it would not be technically feasible for a single entity to control all of the information conveyed on the Internet.”
Id.
In fact, when the subscriber goes to Fil-mOn X’s website and directs FilmOn X to stream the television programming, the subscriber is essentially retrieving information stored in remote computers.
Reno II, 521
U.S. at 852,
Moreover, satellite providers, like Internet-based services, deliver video content through many types of communication channels, such as cables, wires, and microwaves. See Suppl. Jones Decl. ¶6. Since satellite providers are not cable systems, it is unlikely that Congress intended for any entity that happens to employ wires and cables as a mere part- of its-transmission path to qualify as a “cable system.” Defen *22 dants do not provide a cogent explanation as to why FilmOn X should be treated differently. In any event, to the extent that the plain text of § 111(f)(3) could be deemed ambiguous in its definition, the Court looks to the Copyright Office’s interpretation and decides the degree to which it may be entitled to deference. See infra Part 4 of Analysis Section.
Defendants also argue that Congress intended § 111 to encompass evolving technologies. Defs.’ Mem. at 15. To support this proposition, Defendants rely on the fact that a facility’s secondary retransmissions can be made by “wires, cables, microwave, or
other communications channels ” Id.
(quoting § 111(f)(3)) (emphasis added). According to Defendants, the Internet falls under this last broad.category. The argument ignores an important canon of statutory interpretation.
Ejusdem generis
(“of the same kind or class”) teaches that “when a statute sets out a series of specific items ending with a general term, that general term is confined to covering subjects comparable to the specifics it follows.”-
Hall Street Assoc., LLC v. Mattel, Inc.,
A communications channel is “the medium used to transmit the signal from the transmitting • to the receiving point.” Claude Shannon, “Communication In the Presence of Noise,” 86 Proceedings of the IEEE 1 (1998), Wires, cables, and microwaves are examples of such media with “specific” and- “defining characteristics,” such as “bandwidth, noise, and throughput.” See Suppl. Jones Decl. ¶¶ 4-5. The Internet does not share these characteristics. Instead,; the Internet is “a global network of interconnected computers” that has “no centralized storage location, control point, or communications channel.” ivi II, 691 F.3d at. 280 (citations omitted); see also Suppl. Jones Deck ,¶ 4, The Court concludes that a system that operates through nebulous international- connections in cyberspace does not constitute a “channel” similar .to “wires, cables [or] microwave.”
■ Indeed, the plain language of § 111(f)(3) does not support Defendants’ broad interpretation, which becomes even more farfetched when the words are read “in their context, and with a view to their place in the overall statutory scheme.”
King,
135 S.Ct. at-2488, If it were true that Congress intended the definition of a.cable system to embrace any and all new technologies, Congress would not have-amended the Act in 1994 to specify “microwave” as an example of a “communications channel.”
ivi II,
Beyond - the text and overall statutory scheme, the legislative history of the Copyright Act indicates that the “approach of the bill [containing the 1976 amendments]
*23
is to set forth the copyright .owner’s exclusive rights in
broad terms in section 106,
and then to provide various
limitations, qualifications, "or exemptions
in the 12 sections that follow.” 1976 H.R. Rep., at 61 (emphasis added). Section 111 contains “limitations” that must be construed narrowly to preserve the copyright owner’s broad § 106 exclusive rights.
See Tasini v. N.Y. Times Co.,
Finally, another canon of statutory interpretation counsels against construing the text broadly to include Internet-based retransmission services. The
Charming Betsy
canon provides that “an aсt of Congress ought never to be construed to violate the law of nations if any other possible construction remains.”
Murray v. Schooner Charming Betsy,
In conclusion, the plain language of § 111(f)(3) contradicts Defendants’ position that Internet-based retransmitters are entitled to a compulsory license. The Court’s interpretation becomes even more forceful when the text is read as part of the overall statutory scheme. The best Defendants could assert is that § 111(f)(3) is ambiguous, particularly with respect to: (1) whether the entity must own or' control its transmission path from headend to paying subscriber .to qualify as a cable system; and (2) whether the entity must retransmit broadcast signals exclusively by wires, cables, microwaves, or other communications channels. Although the analysis above resolves those qlaims, to the extent that the statutory text may be still deemed ambiguous, this Court will consider the Copyright Office’s interpretation of § 111 and determine whether it is entitled to deference.
*24 4. The Copyright Office’s Interpretation of §111
The Copyright Office is the federal agency responsible for managing and overseeing § llí’s compulsory licensing scheme.
See MPAA,
For over fifteen years, the Copyright Office has taken the position that Internet-based retransmission services are not cable systems and do not fall within § 111.
See ivi II,
We understand FilmOn to be an internet-based service that retransmits broadcast television programming. In the view of the Copyright Office, such a service falls outside the scope of the Section 111 license ... As explained in [ivi II], Section 111 is meant to encompass localized retransmission services that are regulated (as cable systems by the FCC. [69 F.3d] at 284 (quoting 57 Fed. Reg. 3284, 3292 (Jan. 29, 1992)). We do not see anything in the Supreme Court’s recent decision in [Aereo III] that would alter this conclusion. .,. For the reasons discussed above, the Offiсe does not believe FilmOn qualifies for the Section 111 statutory license, and will not process FilmOn’s filings at this time. In. recognition that the question of eligibility ... appears to have been raised again before the courts, however, the Office mil not refuse FilmOn’s filings but will instead accept them on a provisional basis.
July 23, 2014 Copyright Office Letter at 1-2 (footnotes omitted).
Before analyzing, the Copyright Office’s interpretation,, the Court must first determine the type and amount of deference owed to the agency. Plaintiffs argue that
*25
the Court should apply
Chevron
deference, and thus adopt the Copyright Office’s interpretation so long as it is reasonable. Pis.’ Mem. at 12-17 (relying on
Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc.,
The Copyright Office’s .position that Internet-based services are not cable systems under § 111(f)(3) is not based on a formal regulation but on a series of statements, policy documents, and congressional testimonies over the years. While it is true that the absence of a final , regulation does not automatically preclude
Chevron
deference, it is also true that “the overwhelming number .of cases applying
Chevron
deference have reviewed the fruits of notice-and-comment rulemaking or formal adjudication.”
Mead,
Nonetheless, deference to the agency’s interpretation may still be warranted under Skidmore.
20
Id.
(citing
Mead,
*26
The Copyright Office has consistently opined that Internet-based retransmission services do not qualify for a § 111 compulsory license. The Copyright Office first noted the vast differences between “industries eligible for compulsory licensing” and Internet-based retransmission services as long ago as 1997. App’x of Copyright Office [Dkt. 91], Ex. 5, (U.S. Copyright Office, A Review of the Copyright Licensing Regimes Covering Retransmissions of Broadcast Signals 97 (1997)). Given these differences, the Office concluded that Internet-based retransmit-ters were not entitled to a compulsory license. -Three years later, the Register of Copyrights reaffirmed this position before Congress. Id., Ex. 2 (Statement of Mary-beth Peters, Register of Copyrights Before the House Subcommittee on Courts and Intellectual Property, 106th Congress, 2d Sess., at 9 (June 15, 2000)) (2000 Hearings). The Register told Congress that since § 111 “could not reasonably be interpreted to include Internet retransmissions ... [,] if there is to be a compulsory license covering sueh retransmissions, it will have to come from newly enacted legislation and not existing law.” Id. The Copyright Office hаs been consistent in denying a § 111 license to Internet-based retransmission services. See■ id., Ex. 6 (Letter dated Nov.-10, 1999 from Mary-beth Peters to Sen. Orrin. G. Hatch, reprinted in 145 Cong. Rec. 30980 (Nov. 19, 1999)); accord, id., Ex. 10, 2000 Hearings at 88 (Statement of Peggy Miles, Chairman of the International Webcasting Association).
In 2008, the Copyright Office issued a report in response to a congressional directive seeking the Office’s views on a variety of compulsory licensing matters, including the expansion of “current licensing schemes ... to include the delivery of broadcast programming over the Internet.”
ivi I,
The Office continues to oppose an Internet statutory license that would permit any website on the Internet to retransmit television programming without the consent of the copyright owner. Such a measure, if enacted, would effectively wrest control away from program producers who make significant investments in content and who power the creative engine in the U.S. economy.
SHVERA Report at 188. In response to concerns about the lack of competition and the lack of public access to broadcast programming, the Office reported that “there is no proof that the Internet video market is failing to thrive and is in need of government assistance through a licensing system.” Id. To the contrary, the Office explained that “the lack of a statutory license provides an incentive for parties to find new ways to bring broadcast programming to the marketplace and that market, by all accounts, continues to grow.” Id.
Congress has been fully aware of the Copyright Office’s longstanding interpretation.
See, e.g.,
2000 Hearings, Ex. 6 at 359,
*27
reprinted in
145 Cong. Rec. 30980-82 (Nov. 19,1999) (statements of Sens. Hatch and Leahy) (acknowledging that “under current law, Internet and similar online communication services are not and never have been, eligible to claim the cable or satellite cómpulsory licenses created by Section 111 and 119”). Despite this awareness, Congress has neither amended the text of § 111 nor enacted a separate compulsory-licensing scheme to include Internet-based retransmission services. However, Congress has repeatedly amended the statute in other respects. For example, it amended the cable system definition to include the term “microwave” and enacted the licensing scheme for satellite providers.
See ivi II,
Inaction in the face of a consistent legal interpretation can signal Congress’s agreement. If Congress had intended to have Internet-based retransmission services qualify for a § 111 license, it would have already acted to reject the Copyright Office’s interpretation. That has not been the case. Under these circumstances, “it is well established that once an agency’s statutory construction has been fully brought to the attention of the public and Congress, and the latter has not sought to alter that interpretation although it has amended the statute in other 'respects, then presumably the legislative intent has been correctly discerned.”
Bolden v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield, Assoc.,
In addition, the Copyright Office’s interpretation of § 111(f)(3) is independently persuasive because it is grounded in the statute’s text and legislative history. The Office has clearly stated that § 111 was intended for “an inherently localized transmission media of limited availability.” 62 Fed. Reg. 18705, 18707 (Apr. 17, 1997) (citing 56 Fed. Rеg. 31595 (July 11,1991))-. The Office made this clear when it denied satellite carriers their right to a § 111 license.
See
57 Fed. Reg. 3284, 3292 (“Examination of the overall operation of section 111 proves that the compulsory license applies only to localized retransmission services regulated as cable systems by the FCC.”)., FilmOn X does not, and cannot, dispute that Ipternet-based retransmitters are not “inherently localized transmission media.” 62 Fed. Reg, 18705, 18707. Since the Eleventh Circuit found this interpretation of § 111(f)(3) to be reasonable with respect to satellite .carriers, the Court finds that the same interpretation is at the very least persuasive with respect to Internet-based retransmitters,
See Oman,
With respect to the text, the Copyright Office rekehed its determination based on the requirement in § 111(f)(3) that a “facility[] located in any State,” and refers to “contiguous communities” and “headend.” As 'the Office points out, these terms do not have any application to a nationwide, let alone global, service.
See ivi II,
'
Moreover, the Office’s, position is also persuasive because “at the time Congress created the cable compulsory license, the FCC regulated the cable industry as a highly localized medium'óf limited availability.” 62 Fed. Reg. 18705, 18707 (April 17, 1997) (citing 56 Fed. Reg. 31595). This suggests that “Congress, cognizant of the FCC’s regulations and the market realities, fashioned a compulsory license with a local rather than a national scope.” Id. This' interpretation of Congress’s intent is consistent with the text, purpose; and legislative history of the statute. See 1976 H.R. Rep., at 86-88 (explaining that traditional cable systems in 1976 served on average two to three communities as part of their efforts to provide broad public access to broadcast programming in remote or distant mountainous communities). As evidenced by the treatment of satellite carriers, Congress has indirectly reaffirmed the Office’s position.
“In- enacting each [compulsory] license, Congress has traditionally considered the unique historical, technological, and regulatory circumstances that affect each industry.” H.R. Rep. No. 108-660 at 8-9 (2004) (2004 H.R. Rep.).- The vast.differences between “the local character-of cable 'systems and the national business model of [Direct Broadcast Satellite] and [Internet-based retransmission services] have resulted in differential public service, carriage, and taxation obligations that ought to be objectively reviewed before Congress enacts sweeping changes.”
Id.
When > Congress enacted § 111 in 1976, Congress certainly did not. • consider the “unique historical, technological, and regulatory circumstances” surrounding an “international . network of interconnected computers.”
Reno II,
*29 In conclusion, the Copyright Office’s persuasive interpretation resolves any potential ambiguities in the text of § 111(f)(3). This Court hereby defers to this interpretation and, for this reason as well, holds that Defendants are not cable systems entitled to a § 111(c) compulsory license.
D. Infringement of Public Performance Rights
Since FilmOn X is not entitled to a § 111(e) compulsory license, the Court must determine whether Plaintiffs’ public performance rights were actually infringed. Defendants argue that Plaintiffs’ Motion as to this copyright infringement claim is procedurally improper and should be denied. Defs.’ Opp’n [Dkt. 100] at 28-30. According to Defendants, the case at this stage should be limited to the § 111 issue pursuant to this Court’s Scheduling Order. Id. (citing Sched. Order [Dkt. 75]). Furthermore, Defendants contend that, the Court’s adjudication of the copyright infringement claim would be premature and unfair to the extent that the parties have not conducted any discovery into: (1) whether time-delayed transmissions constitute public performances within the meaning of the Transmit Clause; and (2) whether and to what extent any eo-defen-dant other than FilmOn X infringed Plaintiffs’ exclusive right of public performance. See id 22
Defendants correctly assert that this Court’s Scheduling Order limited discovery and summary judgment briefing to Defendants’ § 111- defense and counterclaim.
See
Sched. Order, [Dkt. 75];
see also
March 30, 2015 Minute Order re Dkt. 80. While Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16(b)' provides that a scheduling order “shall not be modified except upon a showv ing of good cause and by leave of the district judge,” the underlying purpose of the Rule “is to promote the ability of the Court to manage cases, to develop a sound plan to ¡govern the particular case from start to finish’ and ‘to set[] and keep[] firm pretrial and trial dates.’”
Olgyay v. Soc’y for Envtl. Graphic Design, Inc.,
Moreover, Defendants do not proffer any examples of discovery necessary to argue why such retransmissions are not *30 public performances within the meaning of the Transmit Clause. Therefore, since the parties have extensively argued about Fil-mOn X’s retransmission services, it has become clear that it presents a purely legal, question that can be resolved now based on undisputed evidence in the record. Plaintiffs’ Motion is ripe for adjudication.
1. Nearly-Simultaneous Retransmissions
. [27] To establish a copyright infringement claim, Plaintiffs must establish that they own valid copyrights over the broadcast programming and that any of their exclusive rights under § 106 wаs violated. 2013 D.C. Preliminary Injunction,
Moreover, it is also undisputed that FilmOn X’s nearly-simultaneous retransmissions of over-the-air content are public performances for purposes of the Transmit Clause.
See Aereo III,
2. Time-Delayed Retransmissions
FilmOn X’s time-delayed service allows individual .subscribers to record over-the-air television programming and watch the selected content at a later time. See, Summ. J. David Deck- ¶ 26; Meldal Deck ¶¶ 16-18. Defendants compare the service’s storage and time-shifting function to that of cloud-based storage providers, “in which the user dictates what material will be stored on the network, when copies will be made, and.when ,the network will transmit- that data,” Defs.’ Opp’n at 31. According to-Defendants, since the individual user is the one who accesses the stored content and then directs the provider to transmit it, this process is nothing more than “private transmission” outside the scope of the Copyright Act. Id. This Court disagrees.
While it is true that the Supreme Court in
Aereo III
did not consider Aereo’s time-delayed retransmission service, its reasoning confirms this Court’s conclusion that the Transmit Clause encompasses FilmOn X’s DVR-like functionality.
See
By making available Plaintiffs’ copy,.righted pеrformances, to any member of the public who accesses the FilmOn X service, FilmOn X performs the copyrighted work publicly as defined by the Transmit Clause: Film On X “trans- ■ mit[s] ... a performance ... of the work ...' to the public, by means of any device or process.” S$e 17 U.S.C. § 101, “A ‘device,’ ‘machine,’ or ‘process’ is one now known [i.e., in 1976] or later developed-,” “[tjo ‘transmit’ a performance or display is to communicate it by any device or process.” Id. (emphases added). These two definitions are facially broad and .encompass FilmOn X’s convoluted process for relaying television signals. *31 The Transmit Clause, which applies whether “members of the public capable of receiving the performance or display receive it in the same place or in separate places and at the same time or at different times,” also plainly captures FilmOn X’s DVR-like capabilities.
2013 D.C. Prelim. Inj.,
FilmOn X essentially argues that its timely-delayed retransmissions are “private transmissions” because they are made to individual subscribers, rather than to the public. Defs.’ Opp’n. at 31. Also, Defendants contend that FilmOn X could not be liable because direct infringement requires volitional conduct. Id. at 31-34. According to Defendants, the fact that the subscriber directs FilmOn X to store the over-the-air content means that FilmOn X’s conduct is not intentional. Id. In other words, like a cloud storage service, FilmOn X merely provides equipment to store the over-the-air content.
Defendants, however, merely rehash Aereo’s unsuсcessful arguments in
Aereo III.
The fact that the transmissions originate from individual copies and are streamed to individual users does not render the transmission “private.” Like its nearly-simultaneous transmission service, FilmOn X’s DVR-function renders multiple subscribers “capable of receiving” the same “perceptible images and sounds” of over-the-air programs.
Furthermore, Defendants’ reliance on FilmOn- X’s alleged passive behavior is misplaced. The Supreme Court rejected the proposition that an entity such as Fil-mOn X is merely an equipment supplier that operates based on the subscriber’s instruction and direction.
See id.
at 2507 (“We conclude that Aereo is not just an equipment supplier and that Aereo ‘perform[s].’ ”). An unauthorized secondary transmission constitutes a performance regardless of the time delay. In other words, just because the subscriber has to click a button to initiate the streaming does not mean that FilmOn X does not perform within the meaning of the Transmit Clause.
See
2013 D.C. Prelim. Inj.,
Since
Aereo Ill’s
reasoning applies with equal force in this context, it is no surprise that Defendants choose to rely almost exclusively on Justice Scalia’s dissenting opinion in
Aereo III
and the cases cited therein. Given the broad language of the Transmit Clause,
Aereo Ill’s
reasoning should be extended to time-delayed retransmissions. For purposes of what constitutes a public performance, this typе of service is much more similar to its nearly-simultaneous counterpart, than to a cloud storage service. Unlike a cloud storage service, FilmOn X did not allow servers to store lawfully acquired content and play it back on command. Rather, it captured broadcast signals and saved individual copies of the over-the-air content, so that it
*32
could later “stream the saved copy of the show to the subscriber over the Internet.” Summ. J; David Decl. ¶ 26(d). This difference is important because “an entity that transmits a performance to individuals in their capacities as owners or possessors does not perform to ‘the public,’ whereas an entity like [FilmOn X] that transmits to large numbers of paying subscribers who lack any prior relationship to the works does so perform.”
Aereo III,
IV; CONCLUSION
: For the foregoing reasons, the Court will deny Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, including Defendants’ request to stay, Dkt. 97. The Court will also grant in part and deny in part Plaintiffs’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment,' Dkt. 81. Partial Judgment will be entered in favor of Plaintiffs as follows: (1) FilmOn X, LLC is liable for infringing Plaintiffs’, exclusive right of public performance under section 106(4) of the Copyright Act,, 17 U.S.C. § 106(4); and (2) Defendants’ counterclaim for declaratory relief that they are entitled to a statutory or compulsory license to retransmit Plaintiffs’ copyrighted programming under Section 111 of the. Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. § 111, is dismissed. Finally, Plaintiffs’ copyright infringement claim against FilmOn.TV Networks, .Inc., FilmOn.TV, Inc., FilmOn.com, Inc., and Alkiviades David will be denied without préjudiee. A memorializing Order accompanies this Opinion.
Notes
. Plaintiffs are: Fox Tеlevision Stations, Inc.; Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation; Fox Broadcasting Company, Inc.; NBC Subsidiary (WRC-TV), LLC; NBC Studios LLC; Universal Network Television LLC; Open 4 Business Productions LLC; Telemundo Network Group LLC; American Broadcasting Companies, Inc.; Disney Enterprises, Inc.; Allbritton Communications Company; Gannett Co., Inc.; CBS Broadcasting, Inc.; and CBS Studios.
. The affiliates and co-defendants are Fil-mOn.tv Networks, Inc.,- FilmOn.tv, Inc,,, and FilmOn.com Inc. Along with FilmOn X, these were the original' defendants in the instant case. Plaintiffs later amended their Complaint to include Mr; David. See Second Am. Compl. [Dkt. 66].
. The Court agrees with Defendants that it would be premature to determine whether any other co-defendant, aside from FilmOn X, was involved in the Internet retransmission of copyrighted programming.
. As a result of the Supreme Court’s decision in Aereo III, the Ninth Circuit did not assess Judge Wu’s grant of a preliminary injunction. Instead, the parties agreed to dismiss Defen- . ’ dants’ appeal without prejudice. See Dismissal Order, Fox Television Stations, Inc. v. Aereok-iller, LIC, No, 13-55156 (9th Cir. July 29, 2014).
. The Court notes that only Aereo’s nearly-simultaneous retransmissions, and not its time-delayed retransmissions, were at issue in
Aereo III.
. The parties agree for the most part on the facts presented here.' Unless otherwise cited, these facts can be found in the parties’ statements of uncontested material facts. See Pis.’ SUMF [Dkt. 92-2] and Defs.’ SUMF [Dkt. 97-2].
. In addition to this single master antenna system, also known as the "Lanner system,” FilmOn X used a "trailer system” that consisted of small antennas on a trailer’s roof. Mel-dal'Deck in Supp. of Defs.’ Mot. for Sümm. J. [Dkt. 98-2] (Meldal Deck) ¶ 14. Defendants implemented this system in Los Angeles, New York, Miami, and Chicago. Summ. J. David Deck ¶¶ 23-25. Defendants have now removed these trailer systems and transitioned to the "Lanner” system. Summ. J. David Deck ¶ 25; Meldal Deck ¶¶ 13-15.
. With respect to the first option, the broadcast program was retransmitted nearly simultaneously as it would stream only after several seconds of programming were saved in the "unique directory.” .With respеct to the second option, the viewer, could select the program for later viewing and direct FilmOn X to save a copy of it in the viewer’s "unique directory.”
.The parties disagree as to whether these modifications violated § 11 l(c)(3)’s prohibition against the willful alteration of a program’s content or commercial advertising. The Court finds it unnecessary to decide this issue.
. [Redacted]
. The Copyright Act states: "To ‘perform’ a work means to recite, render, play, dance, pr act it, either directly or by means of any device or process or, in the case of a motion picture or other audiovisual work, to show its images in any sequence or to make the sounds accompanying it audible,” 17 U.S.C, § 101. Section 101 further clarifies that "[a] ‘device,’ ‘machine,’ or ‘process is one now known or later developed.”
Id.
Although the statute does not define the words “to the public,” the Supreme Court has now held that ■ a performance is made "to the public” when the entity transmits the images or sounds to a "group of people outside of a family and friends" that does not own the transmitted
*13
content.
Aereo III,
. The statute defines a "secondary transmission” as "the further transmitting of a primary transmission simultaneously with the primary transmission.” 17 U.S.C, § 111(f)(2).
. Subsection (d) provides, inter alia, that: (1) cable systems "shall, on a semiannual basis, deposit with the Register of Copyrights” a statement of account covering the previous six months and a royalty fee payable to the copyright owners; (2) the Register of Copyrights shall deduct any "reasonable costs incurred by thе Copyright Office” and "deposit the balance in the Treasury of the United States,” so that the funds could later be distributed "with interest by the Librarian of Congress upon authorization by the Copyright Royalty Judges.” 17 U.S.C. § 111(d). This subsection also provides how the royalty fees shall be calculated and distributed. Id.
. Like the Supreme Court in
Aereo III,
this Court previously emphasized how similar Fil-mOn X was to cable television companies, particularly with respect to their “relationship . with - broadcasters such as Plaintiffs.” D.C. Prelim. Inj.,
. In addition to this definition, § 111(f)(3) provides; "For purposes of determining the royalty fee under subsection (d)(1), two or more cable systems in contiguous communities under common ownership or control or operating from one headend shall be considered as one system.” 17 U.S.C. § 111(f)(3). The parties disagree as to whether this sentence is actually part of the "definition” of "cable system.” The Court finds that this sentence merely provides how commonly-owned ■cable systems should be treated for purposes of royalty computation and does not impose additional requirements onto the definition of "cable system.”
See
2015 California decision,
. In 1998, Congress adopted another compulsory licensing scheme for satellite provid- ■ ers after they developed the technology necessary to retransmit local broadcast signals. See 17 U.S.C. § 122.
. The FCC has never issued any regulation . or expressed any policy view that contradicts the Copyright Office’s longstanding interpretation. Defendants urge this Court to stay this case pending an FCC decision on its notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) concerning the classification of over-the-top providers as MVPDs, Defs.’ Mem. at 27-29. This pending NPRM, however,-will only address their classification for purposes of the federal telecommunications regulatory regime. Even if the Copyright Office recognized the pendency of the FCC proceeding in its July 23, 2014 letter to FilmOn X,-there is no certainty as to when the FCC will Issue a decision and, more importantly, as to whether the Copyright Office will in fact change its interpretation of § 111(f)(3) as a result of a future FCC decision. See Defs.’ Req. for Jud. Notice [Dkt. 99-.1] (Defs.’ RJN), Ex, C (NPRM) at 23 (recognizing, that the Copyright Office may not reconsider its position on Internet-based retransmission services even if the proposed rule is adopted). As a result, the Court denies Defendants’ request to stay the case.
. The Copyright Office has issued formal regulations interpreting § 111(f)(3). The regulations establish that § 111 is "clearly directed at localized transmission services.”
See, e.g.,
. Defendants argue that the Copyright Office’s failure to issue a formal regulation to ' govern Internet-based retransmission services means that it does not intend its policy views to carry the force of law.
See
Defs.’ Reply [Dkt. 126] at 15. Defendants contend that this Court should not give any deference to the Office’s interpretation. Further, Defendants ignore that it was not until recently/especially in the wake of
Aereo III,
that Internét-based retransmission services began to claim that they are cable systems. Notably, Aereo and FilmOn X originally conceded that they were not entitled to a § 111(c) compulsory license. Also, since the Copyright Office first articulated its position in 1997, Congress and the courts had always embraced the Office’s interpretation without much debate or controversy. The Office itself made clear that
Aereo III
did not alter its conclusion. July 23, 2014 Copyright Office Letter at- 1. It was not. until recently, when Judge Wu departed from this longstanding view, that the Office’s interpretation was rejected for the first time.
See
2015 California decision, 115 F.Supp,3d 1152,
. Defendants argue that the Copyright Office has afforded a § 111 compulsory license to similar retransmission services. Defendants'offer the examples of AT&T U-verse and Verizon FiOS, which use Internet protocol technology (IPTV) to deliver video content to subscribers. Defs.’ Mem. at 23. Yet, IPTV technology is not the same as the Internet. In fact “IPTV video is typicаlly delivered through a closed, 'end-to-Cnd system’ in which the distributor controls the wires and routers right up until the subscriber’s home.”
ivi I,
. Plaintiffs concede that discovery might be needed concerning the co-defendants’ roles and involvement in FilmOn X’s transmissions. See Pis.’ Reply [Dkt. 114] at, 24. ("While the evidence shows that all of defendants are liable for infringement, ... that adjudication can await for another day when Plaintiffs have been able to take discovery confirming the interlocking nature of the companies and Mr. David’s control over them.”). This Court will deny without prejudice Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment of copyright infringement with respect to Mr. David, FilmOn.tv Networks, Inc., FilmOn.tv, Inc., and Fil-mOn.com Inc.
. This statement by the Supreme Court also demonstrates that Aereo III did not adopt a technology-agnostic interpretation of the Copyright Act. Technological differences matter in determining whether the subscriber has any prior relationship to the copyrighted programming1.
