Plaintiff Lockheed Martin Corp. (“Lockheed”) appeals summary judgment in favor of Defendant Network Solutions, Inc. (“NSI”) on Lockheed’s action for trademark infringement, unfair competition, dilution, and contributory infringement under the Lanham Trademark Act of 1946, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1051-1127 (1994 & Supp. I 1995), as amended (the “Lanham Act”). The district court published its decision granting summary judgment to NSI and refusing to grant Lockheed’s motion for leave to amend its complaint.
I
This appeal concerns the NSI registration scheme for domain-name combinations, which we discussed in our recent
Avery Dennison Corp. v. Sumpton,
WTien a third party seeks to maintain an Internet web site, that party must reserve a location, called an Internet Protocol («IP”) Address, and do the necessary programming. When an Internet user accesses the third party’s web site, the user *982 enters the domain-name combination that corresponds to the IP Address and is routed to the host computer. An industry of surrogate hosts has developed, where an Internet Service Provider licenses space on its computers to a third-party web-site operator, permitting the operator to maintain a web site without keeping his or her computer continually connected to the Internet. The Internet Service Providers do not provide the translation service from an entered domain-name combination to the appropriate IP Address. A separate organization has the responsibility to perform the translation function.
A
At all relevant times, NSI was the sole National Science Foundation contractor in charge of registering domain-name combinations for the top-level domains .gov, .edu, .com, .org, and .net. (For clarity, we set off Internet-related character strings with the caret symbols (“ ”)•) After registration, NSI entered the combination and the corresponding IP Address in its database, permitting automatic translation when an Internet user entered a domain-name combination. NSI is no longer the exclusive registrar. Since oral argument on this appeal, a new competitive scheme has been implemented. See Jeri Clausing, 3-Week Delay in Opening Up Internet Name Registration, N.Y. Times, June 28, 1999, at Cl.
When registering with NSI to receive a domain-name combination, an applicant submits NSI’s “template” electronically over the Internet. On approval, NSI puts the domain-name combination in its database in conjunction with the correct IP Address. NSI then routes Internet users who enter a certain domain-name combination to the registrant’s computer. At the time of argument on this appeal, NSI was receiving approximately 130,000 registrations per month, although evidence indicates that the number of monthly registrations has been increasing steadily and is possibly much larger today. Ninety percent of templates are processed electronically, and the entire registration process for each application requires between a few minutes and a few hours. Ten percent of the time, an employee of NSI reviews the application. Human intervention might occur because of an error in filling out the form or because the applied-for domain name includes a “prohibited” character string' — such as specific variations on the words Olympic, Red Cross, or NASA, and certain “obscene” words. NSI also performs a conflict check on all applications, which compares an application to other registered domain-name combinations. However, NSI does not consult third parties during the registration process, check for a registrant’s right to use a particular word in a domain-name combination, or monitor the use of a combination once registered. NSI is also not an Internet Service Provider. It performs none of the “hosting” functions for a web site.
NSI does maintain a post-registration dispute-resolution procedure. Anyone who feels that his or her rights are violated by the domain-name combination maintained by a registrant can submit a certified copy of a trademark registration to NSI. NSI then requires the registrant to obtain a declaratory judgment of the right to maintain the domain-name combination. If the registrant fails to do so, its registration is terminated.
B
Lockheed owns and operates “The Skunk Works,” an aircraft design and construction laboratory. Since 1943, The Skunk Works has developed prototypes of this country’s first jet fighter, the U-2 and SR-71 spy planes, and the F-117 and F-22 fighter planes. The Skunk Works is currently involved in designing a possible replacement for the space shuttle. “Skunk Works” is a registered and incontestable service mark.
*983 II
Third parties, not involved in this litigation, have registered domain-name combinations with NSI which are variations on the phrase “skunk works.” These include: < skunkworks.com >, <skunkworks.net>, <skunkwrks.com>, <skunkwerks.com>, <skunkworx.eom>, ctheskunk-works.eom>, <skunkworksl.com>, <skunkworks.org>, <skunkwear.eom>, <the-skunkwerks.com>, <skunk-wurks.com>, and <theencryptedskunk-works.com >. Lockheed alleges that many of these registrations infringe and dilute its “Skunk Works” service mark.
Lockheed sent two letters, on May 7 and June 18, 1996, bringing the <skunk-works.com> and <skunkworks.net> registrations to NSI’s attention. Lockheed’s letters informed NSI of its belief that the third-party registrants were infringing or diluting Lockheed’s service mark. Lockheed requested that NSI cancel the allegedly offending registrations. Lockheed also requested that NSI cease registering domain-name combinations that included “Skunk Works” or variations on the phrase and report to Lockheed all such domain-name combinations contained in its registry. NSI took no action on Lockheed’s requests, informing Lockheed by letter that Lockheed had failed to comply with the terms of NSI’s dispute resolution policy. Due to Lockheed’s dealings with the third-party registrants, <skunk-works.com> and <skunkworks.net> ceased bbing used, but NSI did not immediately cancel the registrations and later permitted a new registrant to register <skunkworks.com>.
Lockheed sued NSI on October 22, 1996, claiming contributory service mark infringement, infringement, unfair competition, and service mark dilution, all in violation of the Lanham Act, and also seeking declaratory relief. The complaint alleged that four specific domain-name registrations infringed or diluted Lockheed’s “Skunk Works” service mark. The parties stipulated to April 1, 1997, as the cut-off date for motions to amend the pleadings. Lockheed later proposed, over NSI’s objection, that the cutoff date be moved to July 7, 1997. NSI moved for summary judgment. On August 19, 1997, Lockheed moved to amend its complaint to add a cause of action for contributory dilution and to allege several additional domain-name combinations registered with NSI. The district court denied the motion to amend and granted summary judgment to NSI.
III
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.
Margolis v. Ryan,
IV
Contributory infringement occurs when the defendant either intentionally induces a third party to infringe the plaintiffs mark or supplies a product to a third party with actual or constructive knowledge that the product is being used to infringe the service mark.
Inwood Lab., Inc. v. Ives Lab., Inc.,
The district court assumed for purposes of summary judgment that third parties were infringing Lockheed’s “Skunk Works” service mark, and NSI does not
*984
ask us to affirm on the alternate ground that no genuine issue of material fact exists as to infringement. We are thus left to consider two issues on Lockheed’s contributory infringement cause of action: (1) whether NSI supplied a product to third parties and (2) whether NSI had actual or constructive knowledge of any infringement. Because we accept the district court’s excellent analysis on the first question,
see
A
Under the plain language of the
Inwood Lab.
formulation, to be liable for contributory infringement, NSI must supply a “product” to a third party with which the third party infringes Lockheed’s service mark.
Inwood Lab.
has been applied in the broader context of renting booth space at a flea market.
See Hard Rock Cafe Licensing Corp. v. Concession Servs., Inc.,
Hard Rock and
Fonovisa
teach us that when measuring and weighing a fact pattern in the contributory infringement context without the convenient “product” mold dealt with in
Inwood Lab.,
we consider the extent of control exercised by the defendant over the third party’s means of infringement.
Hard Rock,
B
The case at bench involves a fact pattern squarely on the “service” side of the product/service distinction suggested by Inwood Lab and its offspring. All evidence in the record indicates that NSI’s role differs little from that of the United States Postal Service: when an Internet user enters a domain-name combination, NSI translates the domain-name combination to the registrant’s IP Address and routes the information or command to the corresponding computer. Although NSI’s routing service is only available to a registrant who has paid NSI’s fee, NSI does not supply the domain-name combination *985 any more than the Postal Service supplies a street address by performing the routine service of routing mail. As the district court correctly observed,
Where domain names are used to infringe, the infringement does not result from NSI’s publication of the domain name list, but from the registrant’s use of the name on a web site or other Internet form of communication in connection with goods or services.... NSI’s involvement with the use of domain names does not extend beyond registration.
The “direct control and monitoring” rule established by
Hard Rock
and
Fonovisa
likewise fails to reach the instant situation. The district court correctly recognized that NSI’s rote translation service does not entail the kind of direct control and monitoring required to justify an extension of the “supplies a product” requirement.
See
In an attempt to fit under Fonovisa’s umbrella, Lockheed characterizes NSI’s service as a licensing arrangement with alleged third-party infringers. Although we accept Lockheed’s argument that NSI licenses its routing service to domain-name registrants, the routing service is just that — a service. In
Fonovisa
and
Hard Rock,
by contrast, the defendants licensed real estate, with the consequent direct control over the activity that the third-party alleged infringers engaged in on the premises.
Hard Rock,
V
Lockheed also urges that NSI is liable as a printer or publisher under 15 U.S.C. § 1114(2) (1994), which reads in pertinent part:
[T]he remedies given to the owner of a right infringed under this chapter or to a person bringing an action under section 1125(a) of this title shall be limited as follows:
(A) Where an infringer or violator is engaged solely in the business of printing the mark or violating matter for others and establishes that he or she was an innocent infringer or innocent violator, the [plaintiff] shall be entitled as against such infringer or violator only to an injunction against future printing.
(B) Where the infringement or violation complained of is contained in ... an electronic communication ..., the remedies ... shall be limited to an injunction against the presentation ... in future transmissions of such electronic communications.
Id.
Section 1114(2) does not create an independent cause of action, but limits the remedies available to a plaintiff from an innocent infringer, requiring infringement of a trademark right or success on an unfair competition claim for injunctive relief.
Barrios v. American Thermal Instruments, Inc.,
VI
Finally, Lockheed argues that the district court abused its discretion in fail
*986
ing to grant leave to amend its complaint to (1) add a contributory dilution cause of action and (2) include allegations of several other offending domain-name combinations. As a general rule, leave to amend should be “freely given when justice so requires.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a);
Foman v. Davis,
Although delay is not a dispositive factor in the amendment analysis, it is relevant,
Morongo Band of Mission Indians v. Rose,
A need to reopen discovery and therefore delay the proceedings supports a district court’s finding of prejudice from a delayed motion to amend the complaint.
Solomon v. North Am. Life & Cas. Ins. Co.,
Bad faith on the part of the moving party also supports denying the motion to amend.
Griggs,
Although we conclude from the above discussion that the district court was well within its discretion to deny Lockheed leave to amend its complaint, the fourth factor—futility of the proposed amendment—also supports the decision. Where the legal basis for a cause of action is tenuous, futility supports the refusal to grant leave to amend.
Morongo Band,
The one court to recognize the contributory dilution cause of action defined the claim as encouraging others to dilute.
Kegan v. Apple Computer Inc.,
*987 VII
NSI requested attorneys’ fees pursuant to the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a). We deny its request because Lockheed’s appeal was not sufficiently unreasonable or frivolous to constitute an “exceptional case[ ]” as required by the Lanham Act for attorneys’ fees to be warranted.
VIII
NSI is not liable for contributory infringement as a matter of law. Lockheed does not appeal the district court’s decision on its infringement, unfair competition, and dilution claims against NSI, and the district court did not abuse its discretion in refusing leave to amend the complaint. We have also considered Lockheed’s request for judicial notice and motion to strike and deny both.
AFFIRMED.
