OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff files suit seeking damages and injunctive relief for alleged trademark infringement under the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1051-1127. Plaintiff also alleges state statutory claims for unlawful trade practices, trademark infringement and dilution, and common law claims of unfair competition and trademark infringement. Defendants seek dismissal for lack of personal jurisdiction pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(2). 'For the reasons discussed below, defendants’ motion is granted.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Plaintiff, Music Millennium, is a business incorporated in Oregon with its principal place of business located in Portland, Oregon. Plaintiff opened its first retail outlet under the name “Music Millennium” in 1969. Plaintiff now operates two retail music stores in Portland and also sells products through mail and telephone orders and its Internet Web site.
Defendant Millennium Music, Inc., is a South Carolina corporation and general partner of defendant Millennium Music, L.P., a South Carolina limited partnership. Defendants operate retail music stores in South Carolina under the name “Millennium Music.” Defendants sell products through their retail outlets and their Internet Web site, although the vast majority of sales occur at their retail stores. From March 1998 through September 1998, defendants sold fif *909 teen compact discs to nine separate customers in six states and one foreign country. The sales totaled approximately $225. During the same period, defendants’ retail - sales were $2,180,000. Defendants also offer franchising circulars through the Internet and have two franchised stores in North Carolina.
Defendants have purchased a small-amount of compact discs from Allegro Corporation (“Allegro”), a distributor located in Portland, Oregon. Defendants’ purchases from Allegro in 1994-1997 totaled approximately one-half of one percent of defendants’ inventory purchases for those years.
On or about July 7, 1998, plaintiff received a credit document from Allegro. The credit was mailed to plaintiff in error; the document apparently was intended for defendants. See Affidavit of Donna Cleaver, Exhibit A.
On August 21, 1998, an Oregon resident, Linda Lufkin, purchased a compact disc from defendants through their Web site. During oral argument on defendants’ motion to dismiss, the court learned from defendants that an attorney at the law firm for which Ms. Lufkin works requested that she purchase a compact disc from defendant. Apparently, the attorney is an acquaintance of plaintiffs counsel. Plaintiff did not dispute these facts. Defendants have sold no other merchandise to any Oregon resident.
Plaintiffs filed suit on August 28, 1998. According to plaintiffs complaint, defendants’ use of the name “Millennium Music” in connection with the sale of goods in interstate commerce violates plaintiffs state and common law trademark rights. Plaintiff further alleges that consumers familiar with plaintiff will likely be confused as to the source or origin of defendants’ goods, thereby causing plaintiff harm.
In September of 1998, defendants added a disclaimer to their Web site indicating that their products and franchise circulars were not available in Oregon.
II. JURISDICTIONAL STANDARDS
Determining whether personal jurisdiction exists over an out-of-state defendant involves two inquiries: whether the forum state’s long-arm statute permits the assertion of jurisdiction and whether assertion of personal jurisdiction violates federal due process.
Fireman’s Fund, Ins. Co. v. National Bank of Cooperatives,
Due process requires that a defendant, if not present in the state, “have certain minimum contacts with it such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.”
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
A. General Jurisdiction
General jurisdiction refers to the authority of a court to hear any cause of action involving a defendant, regardless of whether the cause of action arose from the defendant’s activities within the forum state.
Helicopteros,
It is undisputed that defendants’ business operations and retail outlets are located in South Carolina. Further, defendants have no physical presence within the state of Oregon. Defendants are not registered- to conduct business in Oregon and have no registered agents, employees or sales representatives located in Oregon. No principles or personnel of defendants have ever traveled to Oregon. Defendants have never received a -franchise inquiry from Oregon and have never offered a franchise to an Oregon resident or corporation. The only possible “contacts” defendant have had with Oregon include the sale of one compact disc to an Oregon resident, the purchase of inventory from an Oregon distributor and, according to plaintiff, the maintenance of an Internet Web site.
Plaintiff does not and cannot assert that any of these bases support general jurisdiction over defendants. Defendants’ sale of one compact disc and sporadic purchases from a supplier are neither substantial nor “continuous and systematic” contacts with this forum. Further, the court is aware of no case in which a court asserted general jurisdiction based on the existence of an Internet Web site. In fact, a California district court declined to assert general jurisdiction on this ground.
McDonough v. Fallon McElligott, Inc.,
B. Specific Jurisdiction
Specific jurisdiction refers to a situation in which the cause of action arises directly from a defendant’s contacts with the forum state.
See Sher v. Johnson,
Purposeful availment is shown “if the defendant has taken deliberate action within the forum state or if he has created continuing obligations to forum residents.”
Ballard,
1. Sale of Compact Disc
Plaintiff claims that defendants’ sale of one compact disc to Ms. Lufkin constitutes purposeful availment of this forum, because the sale occurred after defendants “had solicited sales over the Internet in the state of Oregon.” Plaintiffs Memorandum in Opposition to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, p. 2. The court cannot agree.
During oral argument, plaintiff did not contest the fact that an acquaintance of plaintiffs counsel instructed Ms. Lufkin to purchase a compact disc from defendants. The court was gratified to learn that Ms. Lufkin, at least, was allowed to select the compact disc she was directed to purchase. Regardless, the court finds that the sale to Ms. Lufkin was nothing more than an attempt by plaintiff to manufacture a contact with this forum sufficient to establish personal jurisdiction.
Defendants cannot be said to have “purposely” availed themselves of the protections of this forum when it was an act of someone associated with plaintiff, rather than' defendants’ Web site advertising, that brought defendants’ product into this forum. Moreover, plaintiffs claims of trademark infringement and unfair trade practices do not arise from the sale of the compact disc to Ms. Lufkin. “The gravamen of both an infringement and an unfair competition claims is whether the defendant has created a likelihood of confusion.”
Shakey’s, Inc. v. Covalt,
The court is dismayed by plaintiffs counsel’s lack of candor. In submissions to this court, including the complaint, counsel repeatedly asserted that defendants’ sale of goods in Oregon had caused plaintiff harm and “ascertainable loss.” Complaint, ¶25. However, it is clear to the court that no confusion and no harm or loss resulted from one commercial sale orchestrated by plaintiff through an acquaintance of counsel. Such questionable and unprofessional tactics cannot subject defendants to jurisdiction in this forum. “Only those contacts with the forum that were created by the defendant, rather than those manufactured by the unilateral acts of the plaintiff, should be considered for due process purposes.”
Edberg v. Neogen Corp.,
2. Purchases from Oregon Supplier
Likewise, defendants purchases from Allegro do not suffice to establish the requisite minimum contacts. It is well-established that sporadic purchases within a forum cannot support the assertion of personal jurisdiction unless the cause of action arises from or relates to those purchases.
Helicopteros,
Plaintiffs reliance on section § 646.608(1)(c) is misplaced. That statute defines an unlawful trade practice as including those which cause a “likelihood of confusion or of misunderstanding as to affiliation, connection, or association with, or certifica
*912
tion by, another.” Or.Rev.Stat. § 646.608(c)(1). As defendants argue, the primary purpose of the Oregon Unlawful Trade Practices Act, which includes § 646.608, is to protect consumers from misleading representations regarding the source of products, thus creating a “likelihood of confusion.”
Shakey’s,
A “[l]ikelihood of confusion exists when
consumers
are likely to assume that a product or service is associated with a source other than its actual source because of similarities between the two sources’ marks or marketing techniques.”
Id.
(emphasis added);
Kendall-Jackson Winery, Ltd. v. E. & J. Gallo Winery,
Even if § 646.608(e) was intended to prohibit confusion among those other than consumers, § 646.608 does not confer a private cause of action. Or.Rev.Stat. § 646.638(1);
Terry,
S. Effects of Defendants’ Conduct
During oral argument, plaintiff argument that the effects of defendant’s alleging infringing activities cause harm in Oregon, plaintiffs principle place of business, thus subjecting defendants to this court’s jurisdiction. In support for its invocation of the “effects test,” plaintiff cites
Indianapolis Colts, Inc. v. Metropolitan Baltimore Football Club,
In
Indianapolis Colts,
the Canadian Football League (“CFL”) team in Baltimore attempted to call itself the “Baltimore CFL Colts.”
The Seventh Circuit asserted personal jurisdiction over the defendants, because the allegedly infringing trademark would cause harm in Indiana, the home of the Indianapolis Colts. Id. at 411-412. The court further found that defendant had “entered” the state through broadcasts of football games within the state. Id. at 412.
The facts of Indianapolis Colts are distinguishable from those before this court. Given the history between the two teams, it is reasonable to assume that the defendants were directing their infringing action at Indiana, specifically at the owner of the Indianapolis Colts, knowing that their actions likely would cause harm. And, presumably, television broadcasts of football games are aired in specific market areas. Unlike Indianapolis Colts, plaintiff here offers no evidence that defendants intentionally directed its activities at Oregon knowing that plaintiff would be harmed. 2
*913 h. Defendants’Internet Web Site
Plaintiffs remaining ground asserted in support of specific jurisdiction is defendants’ Internet Web site through which persons can purchase compact discs, request franchising information and join a discount club. According to plaintiff, the fact that defendants maintain an interactive, rather than passive, Web site is a sufficient contact with this forum to establish personal jurisdiction. In other words, plaintiff argues that purposeful availment is satisfied by an Internet Web site which allows for the exchange of information between the Web user and the Web site, regardless of whether an actual exchange of information occurred with residents of this forum.
The facts of this case coupled with plaintiffs argument raise questions that have yet to be answered in this Circuit. Because the answers to these questions will have far-reaching implications for those who utilize the Internet for commercial purposes, the court takes a comprehensive look at the current state of the law with respect to personal jurisdiction and Internet contacts.
Ill THE INTERNET AND PERSONAL JURISDICTION
A The Internet and the World Wide Web
The Internet is a “giant network which interconnects innumerable smaller groups of linked computer networks.”
American Civil Liberties Union v. Reno,
Computers and networks that comprise the system are owned by governmental and public institutions, non-profit organizations and private parties. Id. “The resulting whole is a decentralized, global medium of communications — or ‘cyberspace’ — that links people, institutions, corporations, and governments around the world.” Id.
The two most common methods to connect with the Internet are the use of a computer or terminal that is directly connected to a computer network, which, in turn, is connected to the Internet, or the use of a personal computer with a modem to connect through telephone lines to a network that is connected to the Internet.
ACLU v. Reno,
The size of the Internet is difficult to estimate with accuracy at any given moment.
ACLU v. Reno,
The World Wide Web (“The Web”) is the most well-known and advanced method of locating and retrieving information on the Internet.
ACLU v. Reno,
Many organizations and businesses' now have “home pages” or “sites” on the Web.
ACLU v. Reno,
The Web contains information from a variety of sources and is accessible to Internet users around the world.
Id.
at 835-36. “Anyone with a personal computer, a telephone modem, and appropriate computer software may gain access to the Internet.”
Heroes, Inc. v. Heroes Foundation,
While the Internet allows businesses to engage in international communication and commerce, those businesses — whether they be one-person operations or multi-national corporations — remain “entitled to the protection of the Due Process Clause, which mandates that potential defendants be able ‘to structure their primary conduct with some minimum assurance as to where the conduct will and will not render them liable to suit.’ ”
Id., quoting World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson,
Unlike newspaper, mailing, radio, television and other media containing advertisements and solicitations, most Internet advertisements and solicitations are not directed at a specific geographic areas or markets; to the contrary, advertising on the Internet targets no one in particular and everyone in particular in any given geographic location. At first glance, the question of personal jurisdiction in such scenarios seems an all or nothing proposition. Nevertheless, district courts — and to a lesser extent, circuit courts — have attempted to develop guidelines in this novel area of the law, although “the development of the law concerning the permissible scope of personal jurisdiction is in its infant stages.”
Zippo Manufacturing Co. v. Zippo Dot Com, Inc.,
B. Cases Interpreting Internet Contacts
One of the first cases to address the question of personal jurisdiction and the Internet was
Inset Systems, Inc. v. Instruction Set, Inc.,
In discussing the defendant’s Web site, the court remarked:
In the present case, [defendant] has directed its advertising activities via the Internet and its toll-free number toward not only the state of Connecticut, but to all states. The Internet as well as toll-free numbers are designed to communicate with people and their business in every state. Advertisements on the Internet can reach as many as 10,000 Internet users within Connecticut. Further, once posted on the Internet, unlike radio and television advertising, the advertisement is available continuously to any Internet user.
*915 Id. at 165. Although these findings tend to show that the defendant did not target its Web site at the forum state in any particular manner, the court concluded that, through its Web site, defendant had “purposefully availed itself of the privilege of doing business within Connecticut.” Id.
From this rather inauspicious beginning, the trend has shifted away from finding jurisdiction based solely on the existence of Web site advertising. Instead, “something more” is required to show that the defendant purposefully directed its activities at the forum.
See Cybersell, Inc. v. Cybersell, Inc.,
In
Bensusan Restaurant Corp. v. King,
The court further found that assertion of jurisdiction over King would violate the Due Process Clause, reasoning that King had not purposefully availed himself of the benefits of New York when he “simply created a Web site and permitted anyone who could find it to access it.” Id. at 301. “Creating a site, like placing a product into the stream of commerce, may be felt nationwide — or even worldwide — but without more, it is not an act purposefully directed toward the forum state.” Id. Finally, the court found Bensu-san’s argument “that King should have foreseen that users could access the site in New York and be confused as to the relationship of the two Blue Note clubs” did not satisfy the requirements of due process. Id.
In
Zippo Manufacturing Co. v. Zippo Dot Com, Inc.,
At one end of the scale are circumstances where a defendant “conducts business” over the Internet with residents of the forum, allowing for the assertion of personal jurisdiction in most cases.
Zippo,
Most courts follow the reasoning set forth in
Bensusan
and
Zippo
and decline to assert jurisdiction based solely on Web site advertising.
See e.g., Patriot Systems, Inc. v. C-Cubed Corp.,
Those courts which have asserted jurisdiction in cases involving passive Web sites did so because the defendant had additional contacts with the forum which related to the plaintiffs claim.
See Gary Scott International, Inc. v. Baroudi,
Likewise, courts generally have exercised jurisdiction in cases at the other end of the scale, where the defendant “conducted business” over the Internet by engaging in repeated or ongoing business transactions with forum residents or by entering into a contract with the plaintiff through the Internet.
See CompuServe v. Patterson,
Further, courts have found purposeful availment when the claim involves an intentional tort allegedly committed over the Internet, such that the defendant intentionally directed its tortious activities at the forum state.
See Panavision v. Toeppen,
Courts have reached differing conclusions with respect to those cases falling into the middle “interactive” category identified in Zippo. As declared by one commentator, the “current hodgepodge of case law is inconsistent, irrational, and irreconcilable.” Howard B. Stravitz, Personal Jurisdiction in Cyberspace: Something More is Required on the Electronic Stream of Commerce, 49 S.C. L.Rev. 925, 939 (1998). In these cases, some courts find that an interactive Web site alone is sufficient to establish minimum contacts. Others find minimum contacts through additional non-Internet activity in the forum, regardless of whether the activity is related to *917 the underlying claim. Finally, some courts require additional conduct in the forum that is related to the plaintiffs cause of action.
1. Interactive Web Site
a. Personal Jurisdiction Asserted
A case oft-cited for the proposition that interactive Web sites constitute minimum contacts is
Maritz, Inc. v. Cybergold, Inc.,
In
GTE New Media Services Inc. v. Ameritech Corp.,
Finally, in
Vitullo v. Velocity Powerboats, Inc.,
b. Personal Jurisdiction Declined
The following courts declined to assert personal jurisdiction over the defendant based solely on the defendant’s interactive web site.
In
Edberg v. Neogen,
A similar result occurred in
E-Data Corp. v. Micropatent Corp.,
In
Scherr v. Abrahams,
Finally, in
CD Solutions v. Tooker,
£ Interactive Web Site Plus Non-Internet Contacts
In
Hasbro, Inc. v. Clue Computing, Inc.,
The court also deemed jurisdiction proper based on defendant’s non-Internet activities, including services performed for a Massachusetts company. Id. In doing so, the court apparently took a “totality of the contacts” approach and considered contacts unrelated to plaintiffs claim. Although defendant’s Web-related activities were related to the trademark action — indeed, were the nexus of the litigation — defendant’s computer consulting work with a Massachusetts company was completely unrelated to the trademark action.
A different analysis was presented in
Mieczkowski v. Masco Corp.,
S. Interactive Web Site Plus Related Contacts
In
Park Inns International v. Pacific Plaza Hotels, Inc.,
the defendants operated an
*919
interactive Web site and accepted hotel reservations from residents of the forum through the Web site.
Similarly, in
American Network, Inc. v. Access America/Connect Atlanta, Inc.,
In yet
another case, the court asserted jurisdiction over a defendant accused of breaching a trademark licensing agreement with the plaintiff.
Digital Equipment Corp. v. AltaVista Technology, Inc.,
C. Ninth. Circuit Case Law
The Ninth Circuit is one of the few circuits which has jumped in the fray of Internet contacts and personal jurisdiction. Although the two cases decided- by the Circuit are factually distinct from the one before this court, both rulings provide valuable guidance toward its resolution.
The Ninth Circuit has cited with approval the “sliding scale” approach articulated in Zippo. Cybersell, Inc. v. Cybersell, Inc., 130 F.3d 414 (9th Cir.1997). Arizona plaintiffs (“Cybersell AZ”) and Florida defendants (“Cybersell FL”) both formed corporations known as “Cybersell.” Cybersell AZ provided Web advertising, marketing and consulting services. Cybersell FL provided business consulting services for strategic management and marketing on the Web. As part of its marketing effort, Cybersell FL created a Web page which included the “Cy-bersell” logo, a local phone number and an invitation for companies to communications via electronic mail to Cybersell FL, as well as a hypertext link through which users could introduce themselves. Eventually, Cy-bersell AZ filed suit in the District of Arizona for trademark infringement. The district court dismissed the case for lack of personal jurisdiction. The Ninth Circuit affirmed.
In considering the purposeful aváilment factor, the court remarked:
[N]o court has ever held that an Internet advertisement alone is sufficient to subject the advertiser to jurisdiction in the plaintiffs home state.... Rather, in each there has been, ‘something more’ to indicate that the defendant purposefully (albeit electronically) directed his activity in a substantial way to the forum state.
Cybersell,
Recently, the Ninth Circuit reiterated its reasoning set forth in
Cybersell. Panavision International v. Toeppen,
Toeppen engaged in a scheme to register Panavision’s trademarks as his domain names for the purpose of extorting money from Panavision. His conduct, as he knew it likely would, had the effect of injuring Panavision in California where Panavision has its principle place of business and where the movie and television industry is centered.
Id. at 1322. With these principles in mind, the court turns to the facts of this case.
IV. ANALYSIS OF DEFENDANTS’ INTERNET CONTACTS
The court first determines where defendants’ Web site corresponds on the sliding scale of interactivity. Through defendants’ Web site, Web users may purchase compact discs, join a discount club and request franchising information. Affidavit of Lawrence M. Verdun, Ex. A.
. Arguably, the capability of selling compact discs through the Web site could constitute “doing business” over the Internet and confer personal jurisdiction almost as a matter of course. However, the court finds such designation intended for those businesses which conduct a significant portion of their business through ongoing Internet relationships; for example, by entering “into contracts with residents of a foreign jurisdiction that involve the knowing and repeated transmission of computer files over the Internet”
Zippo,
An example of such business is found in
CompuServe v. Patterson,
Here, defendants have done nothing more than publish an interactive Web site. Defendants have not purposefully entered into contracts with Oregon residents through the Internet, other than Ms. Lufkin, nor have defendants otherwise exchanged files electronically with forum residents so as to create “repeated” or “ongoing obligations.”
See Burger King,
Neither is defendants’ Web site at the other end of the spectrum, passively providing information for those interested. Rather, an exchange of information can occur between defendants and users. Thus, defendants’ Web site falls into the middle category, requiring further inquiry into the “level of interactivity and commercial nature of the exchange of information” to determine whether jurisdiction should be exercised.
Zippo,
Plaintiff contends that the nature of defendants’ Web site confers jurisdiction; the crux of plaintiffs argument is that, defendants’ Web site solicits potential Oregon consumers *921 and therefore establishes purposeful availment of this forum. Thus, plaintiff urges the court to adopt the broad view of personal jurisdiction set forth in Inset and Maritz with respect to Internet Web sites. The court declines to do so.
On its face, the site would appear to suffice for personal jurisdiction under the middle category in
Zippo;
the level of potential interactivity, while not necessarily high, is not insubstantial. Further, the potential exchange of information can be commercial in nature. However, the court finds that the middle interactive category of Internet contacts as described in
Zippo
needs further refinement to include the fundamental requirement of personal jurisdiction: “deliberate action” within the forum state in the form of transactions between the defendant and residents of the forum or conduct of the defendant purposefully directed at residents of the forum state.
See Calder,
Although Cybersell involved an “essentially” passive home page, the court’s reasoning easily applies in this case. In declining to assert jurisdiction, the court noted:
Cybersell FL did nothing to encourage people in Arizona to access its site, and there is no evidence that any part of its business (let alone a continuous part of its business) was sought or achieved in Ari-zona____ It entered into no contracts in Arizona, made no sales in Arizona, received no telephone calls from Arizona, earned no income from Arizona, and sent no messages over the Internet to Arizona.
Cybersell,
Here, defendants have “consummated no transaction” and have made no “deliberate and repeated” contacts with Oregon through their Web site.
CompuServe v. Patterson,
Defendants’ Internet Web site, interactive though it may be, is not “conduct and connection” with Oregon giving defendants “fair warning” so that they would reasonably anticipate being “haled” into court here. Defendants have not taken action creating “a substantial connection” with Oregon, or deliberately engaged in “significant activities” within Oregon, or created “ongoing obligations” with residents of Oregon in a manner related to plaintiffs claims.
See Burger King,
*922
Furthermore, plaintiff offers no evidence that defendants targeted Oregon residents with the intent or knowledge that plaintiff could be harmed through their Web site. The Ninth Circuit rejected this notion with respect to the “effects test” in
Cybersell,
a case involving alleged trademark infringement. The Arizona plaintiff had argued that the effects of the defendants’ infringing Internet caused injury in Arizona. The Ninth Circuit disagreed: “Cybersell FL’s web page simply was not aimed intentionally at Arizona knowing that harm was likely to be caused there to Cybersell AZ.”
Cybersell,
A review of defendants’ Web site furthers the conclusion that defendants did not intentionally or purposefully target its activities at Oregon. The site proclaims “Come Visit Us!” and provides a map of the location of defendants’ stores. The maps are local in nature, providing little more than a showing of the cross-streets surrounding the stores. Nothing published on the Web site suggests that defendants intended to target Oregon residents, some 3,000 miles away, any more than they intended to target residents of other states. Rather, from defendants’ invitation to visit their retail outlets, one could reasonably infer that defendants intended to target residents in their area. In sum, the court finds that this, too, is a case where “something more” is required.
Cybersell,
The court recognizes that its reasoning is at odds with some cases addressing this new issue. Not surprisingly, plaintiff relies on
Inset
and
Maritz
for the proposition that jurisdiction over the operator of a Web site is proper if the site is interactive, i.e., capable of exchanging information with the computer user. However, the court finds lacking in
Inset
and
Maritz
the principle that a defendant must “purposefully direct” its activities at or take “deliberate action” in or create “substantial connection” with the forum state so as to provide “fair warning” that such activities may subject defendant to jurisdiction in a distant forum.
See Burger King,
The existence of a Web site, whether passive or interactive, does not rise to the requisite level of conduct. Publishing a Web site requires no “deliberate” action within the forum state. Furthermore, a Web site is not automatically projected to a user’s computer without invitation as are advertisements in a newspaper or on the television and radio. Rather, the user must take affirmative action to access either a passive or interactive Web Site. The user must turn on a computer, access the Internet and the Web, and browse the Web for a particular site. Thus, contrary to the scenario described in Inset, information published on Web sites is not thrust upon users indiscriminately.
Likewise, the court declines to adopt the reasoning in cases like
Hasbro v. Clue Computing,
where contacts unrelated to the plaintiffs claim are considered in conjunction with a Web site in order to assert specific jurisdiction.
Hasbro,
Rather, the court views the better approach as that taken by the courts which refused to assert jurisdiction on the sole
*923
basis of an interactive Web site,
see E-Data,
Absent actual exchanges or transactions with residents of the forum or evidence that local residents were targeted, the distinctions between specific and general jurisdiction become blurred. As the courts in
Inset
and
Maritz
point out, Web sites are accessible day and night to all who possess the necessary technological know-how and equipment. Thus, if an interactive Web site can constitute “purposeful availment” of a forum simply by being continuously accessible to residents of that forum, surely that contact can be considered “continuous and systematic” for purposes of general jurisdiction. Taking this reasoning to its logical conclusion, a plaintiff could sue a foreign defendant in any forum and claim jurisdiction based on the defendant’s interactive Web site, even if the cause of action is unrelated to the Web site. Such results hardly conform with notions of “fair play and substantial justice.”
International Shoe,
Moreover, the imposition of broad territorial concepts of personal jurisdiction on the commercial uses of the Internet has dramatic implications, “opening the Web user up to inconsistent regulations throughout fifty states, indeed, throughout the globe.”
Digital Equipment,
For all of these reasons, this court will not abandon the basic principle that defendants must have taken some action to direct their activities in the
forum so
as to “purposely avail” themselves of the privilege of doing business within Oregon. The timeless and fundamental bedrock of personal jurisdiction assures us all that a defendant will not be “haled” into a court of a foreign jurisdiction based on nothing more than the foreseeability or potentiality of commercial activity with the forum state. World-Wide
Volkswagen,
CONCLUSION
Due process requires that personal jurisdiction be based first and foremost on fairness. If defendants do not have “fair warning” that their Internet activities would render them subject to jurisdiction in this forum, personal jurisdiction may not be had, regardless of other considerations:
Even if the defendant would suffer minimal or no inconvenience from being forced to litigate before the tribunals of another State; even if the forum State has a strong interest in applying its law to the contro *924 versy; even if the forum State is the most convenient location for litigation, the Due Process Clause, acting as an instrument of interstate federalism, may sometimes act to divest the State of its power to render a valid judgment.
World-Wide Volkswagen Corp.,
Plaintiff fails to show that defendants have sufficient minimum contacts with this forum to allow the exercise of personal jurisdiction in accordance with federal due process. Therefore, defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (doc. 21) is GRANTED and all pending motions are DENIED as moot. Plaintiffs Complaint is HEREBY DISMISSED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Rules 4C and 4D provide authorize personal jurisdiction as follows:
4C Local act or omission.
In any action claiming injury to person or property within or without this state arising out of an act or omission within this state by the defendant.
4D Local injury; foreign act.
In any action claiming injury to person or property within this state arising out of an act or omission outside this state by the defendant, provided in addition that at the time of the injury, either:
D(l) Solicitation or service activities were carried on within this state by or on behalf of the defendant; or
D(2) Products, materials, or things distributed, processed, serviced, or manufactured by the defendant were used or consumed within this state in the ordinary course of trade.
. Plaintiff urges the court to infer that defendants' knew of plaintiff’s existence in Oregon for the purposes of this motion. Even assuming that is true, plaintiff offers no evidence that defendants directed their conduct at this forum.
. The “something more” identified in
Cybersell
apparently is a reference to the plurality opinion in
Asahi Metal Indus. Co. v. Superior Court,
The Ninth Circuit tentatively has adopted the plurality opinion in
Asahi,
noting that ”[a]t least a majority and perhaps all the justices agreed in Asahi that jurisdiction cannot be founded on the mere presence of a product in the forum
Omeluk v. Langsten Slip & Batbyggeri A/S,
Many cases find the "stream of commerce” theory of specific jurisdiction analogous to Website advertising, in that the person or business operating the site creates it for use and viewing on the Internet with the hope, if not the expectation, that users will access the site and learn about the company’s products or services.
See Smith v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc.,
. It is unclear whether the court exercised specific or general jurisdiction over the defendants. The court found that "the continuous contact the defendants' interactive website have with the [forum] demonstrate the defendants purposefully established minimum contacts by invoking the benefits and privileges of conducting activities in the forum district."
. The court is not convinced that plaintiff's claims arise from or relate to defendants’ Internet Web site. It seems to the court that plaintiff’s claims for trademark infringement and unfair competition do not depend on defendants’ Web site.
See CD Solutions v. Tooker,
