Olivеr “Buck” Revell sued Hart G.W. Lidov and Columbia University for defamation arising out of Lidov’s authorship of an article that he posted on an internet bulletin board Posted by Columbia. The district court dismissed Revell’s claims for lack of personal jurisdiction over both Li-dov and Columbia. We affirm.
*469 I
Hart G.W. Lidov, an Assistant Professor of Pathology and Neurology at the Harvard Medical School and Children’s Hospital, wrote a lengthy article on the subject of the terrorist bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, which exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland in 1988. The article alleges that a broad politically motivated conspiracy among senior members of the Reagan Administration lay behind their wilful failure to stop the bombing despite clear advance warnings. Further, Lidov charged that the government proceeded to cover up its receipt of advance warning and repeatedly misled the public about the facts. Specifically, the article singles out Oliver “Buck” Revell, then Associate Deputy Director of the FBI, for severe criticism, accusing him of complicity in the conspiracy and coverup. The article farther charges that Re-vell, knowing about the imminent terrorist attack, made certain his son, previously booked on Pan Am 103, took a different flight. At the time he wrote the article, Lidov had never been tо Texas, except possibly to change planes, or conducted business there, and was apparently unaware that Revell then resided in Texas.
Lidov has also never been a student or faculty member of Columbia University, but he posted his article on a website maintained by its School of Journalism. In a bulletin board section of the website, users could post their own works and read the works of others. As a result, the article cоuld be viewed by members of the public over the internet.
Revell, a resident of Texas, sued the Board of Trustees of Columbia University, whose principal offices are in New York City, and Lidov, who is a Massachusetts resident, in the Northern District of Texas. Revell claimed damage to his professional reputation in Texas and emotional distress arising out of the alleged defamation of the defendants, and sought several million dollars in damages. Both defendants moved to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(2). The district court granted the defendants’ motions, and Revell now appeals.
II
A
Our question is whether the district court could properly exercise personal jurisdiction over Hart Lidov and Columbia University, an issue of law we review de novo. 1 The plaintiff bears the burden of establishing jurisdiction, but need only present prima facie evidence. 2 We must accept the plаintiffs “uncontroverted allegations, and resolve in [his] favor all conflicts between the facts contained in the parties’ affidavits and other documentation.” 3 In considering a motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction a district court may consider “affidavits, interrogatories, depositions, oral testimony, or any combination of the recognized methods of discovery.” 4
A federal district court sitting in diversity may exercise pеrsonal jurisdiction over a foreign defendant if (1) the long-arm statute of the forum state creates personal jurisdiction over the defendant; and (2) the exercise of personal jurisdiction is consistent with the due process guarantees of the United States Constitution. 5 Because Texas’s long-arm statute reaches *470 to the constitutional limits, 6 we ask, therefore, if exercising personal jurisdiction over Lidov and Columbia would offend due process.
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment permits a court to exercise personal jurisdiction over a foreign defendant when (1) “that defendant has purposefully availed himself of the benefits and protections of the forum state by establishing ‘minimum contacts’ with the forum state; and (2) the exercise of jurisdiction over that defendant does not offend ‘traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.’ ” 7 Sufficient minimum contacts will give rise to either specific or generаl jurisdiction. 8 “General jurisdiction exists when a defendant’s contacts with the forum state are unrelated to the cause of action but are ‘continuous and systematic.’ ” 9 Specific jurisdiction arises when the defendant’s contacts with the forum “arise from, or are directly related to, the cause of action.” 10
B
Answering the question of personal jurisdiction in this case brings these settled and familiar formulations to a new mode of communication across state lines. Revell first urges that the district court may assert general jurisdiction over Columbia because its website provides internet users the opportunity to subscribe to the Columbia Journalism Review, purchase advertising on the website or in the journal, and submit electronic applications for admission. 11
This circuit has drawn upon the approach of Zippo Manufacturing Co. v. Zippo Dot Com, Inc. 12 in determining whether the operation of an internet site can support the minimum contacts necessary for the exercisе of personal jurisdiction. 13 Zippo used a “sliding scale” to measure an internet site’s connections to a forum state. 14 A “passive” website, one that merely allows the owner to post information on the internet, is at one end of the scale. 15 It will not be sufficient to establish personal jurisdiction. 16 At the other end are sites whose owners engage in repeated online contacts with forum residents over the internet, and in these cases personal jurisdiction may be proper. 17 In between are those sites with some interactive elements, through which a site allows for bilateral information exchange with its visitors. Here, we find more familiar terrain, requiring that we examine the extent of the interactivity and nature of the forum contacts. 18
*471 While we deployed this sliding scale in Mink v. AAAA Development LLC, it is not well adapted to the general jurisdiction inquiry, because even repeated contacts with forum residents by a foreign defendant may not constitute the requisite substantial, continuous and systematic contacts required for a finding of general jurisdiction — in other words, while it may be doing business with Texas, it is not doing business in Texas. 19
Irrespective of the sliding scale, the question of general jurisdiction is not difficult here. Though the maintenance of a website is, in a sense, a continuous presence everywhere in the world, the cited contacts of Columbia -with Texas are not in any way “substantial.” 20
Columbia’s contacts with Texas are in stark contrast to the facts of the Supreme Court’s seminal case on general jurisdiction, Perkins v. Benguet Consolidated Mining Co. 21 In Perkins, a Philippine corporation temporarily relocated to Ohio. 22 The corporation’s president resided in Ohio, the records of the corporation were kept in Ohio, director’s meetings were held in Ohio, accounts were held in Ohio banks, and all key business decisions were made there. 23 Columbia’s internet presence in Texas quite obviously falls far short of this standard.
Our conclusion also comports with the recent decision in Bird v. Parsons, 24 where the Sixth Circuit found Ohio courts lacked general jurisdiction over a non-resident business that registered domain names despite the fact that: (1) the defendant maintained a website open for commerce with Ohio residents and (2) over 4000 Ohio residents had in fact registered domain names with the defendant. 25 By contrast, Columbia, since it began keeping records, never received more than twenty internet subscriptions to the Columbia Journalism Review from Texas residents. 26
C
Turning to the issue of specific jurisdiction, the question is whether Eevell has made out his prima facie case with respect to the defendants’ contacts with Texas. Zippo’s scale does more work with specific jurisdiction — the context in which it was originally conceived. 27
Revell urges that, given the uniqueness of defamation claims and their inherent ability to inflict injury in far-flung jurisdictions, we should abandon the imagery of Zippo. It is a bold but ultimately unpersuasive argument. Defamation hаs its unique features, but shares relevant characteristics with various business torts. 28 Nor is the Zippo scale, as has been sug *472 gested, in tension with the “effects” test of Calder v. Jones 29 for intentional torts, 30 which we address in Part II.D.
For specific jurisdiction we look only to the contact out of which the cause of action arises 31 — in this case the maintenance of the internet bulletin board. Since this defamation action does not arise out of the solicitation of subscriptions or applications by Columbia, those portions of the website need not be considеred.
The district court concluded that the bulletin board was “Zippo-passive” and therefore could not create specific jurisdiction. The defendants insist that Columbia's bulletin board is indistinguishable from the website in Mink. In that case, we found the website would not support a finding of minimum contacts because it only solicited customers, provided a toll-free number to call, and an e-mail address. 32 It did not allow visitors to place orders online. 33 But in this case, any user of the internet can post material to the bulletin board. This means that individuals send information to be posted, and receive information that others have posted. In Mink and Zippo, a visitor was limited to expressing an interest in a commercial product. Here the visitor may participate in an open forum hosted by the website. 34 Columbia’s bulletin board is thus interactive, and we must evaluate the extent of this interactivity as well as Re-vell’s arguments with respect to Calder.
D
1
In Calder, an editor and a writer for the National Enquirer, both residents of Florida, were sued in California for libel arising out of an article published in the Enquirer about Shirley Jones, an actress. 35 The Supreme Court upheld the exercise of personal jurisdiction over the two defendants because they had “expressly aimed” their conduct towards California. 36
The allegedly libelous story concerned the California activities of a California resident. It impugned the professionalism of an entertainer whose television career was centered in California. The article was drawn from California sources, and thе brunt of the harm, in terms both of respondent’s emotional distress and the injury to her professional reputation, was suffered in California. In sum, California is the focal point both of the story and of the harm suffered. 37
The Court also relied upon the fact that the Enquirer had its largest circulation— over 600,000 copies — in California, indicating that the defendants knew the harm of their allegedly tortious activity would be felt there. 38
*473 2
Revell urges that, measured by the “effects” test of Calder, he has presented his prima facie case for the defendants’ minimum contacts with Texas. At the outset we emphasizе that the “effects” test is but one facet of the ordinary minimum contacts analysis, to be considered as part of the full range of the defendant’s contacts with the forum. 39
We find several distinctions between this case and Calder — insurmountable hurdles to the exercise of personal jurisdiction by Texas courts. First, the article written by Lidov about Revell contains no reference to Texas, nor does it refer to the Texas activities of Revell, and it was not directed at Texas readers as distinguished from readers in other states. Texas was not the focal point of the article or the harm suffered, unlike Calder, in which the article contained descriptions of the California activities of the plaintiff, drew upon California sources, and found its largest audience in California. 40 This conclusion fits well with our decisions in other intentional tort cases where the plaintiff relied upon Colder. In those cases we stated that the plaintiffs residence in the forum, and suffering of harm there, will not alone support jurisdiction under Calder. 41 We also find instructive the defamation decisions of the Sixth, Third, and Fourth Circuits in Reynolds v. International Amateur Athletic Federation, 42 Remick v. Manfredy, 43 and Young v. New Haven Advocate, 44 respectively.
In Reynolds a London-based association published a press release regarding the plaintiffs disqualification from international track competition for two years following his failure of a drug test. 45 The plaintiff, an Ohio resident, claimed that the alleged defamation had cоst him endorsement contracts in Ohio and cited Calder in support of his argument that personal jurisdiction over the defendant in Ohio was proper. 46 The court found Calder inappo-site because, inter alia, the allegedly defamatory press release dealt with the plaintiffs activities in Monaco, not Ohio; the source of the report was a urine sam- *474 pie taken in Monaco and analyzed in Paris; and the “focal point” of the release was not Ohio. 47 We agree with the Reynolds court that the sources relied upon and activities described in an allegedly defamatory publication should in some way connect with the forum if Calder is to be invoked. 48 Lidov’s article, insofar as it relates to Revell, deals exclusively with his actions as Associate Deputy Director of the FBI — just as the offending press release in Reynolds dealt only with a failed drug test in Monaco. It signifies that there is no reference to Texas in the article or any rebanee on Texas sourcеs. These facts weigh heavily against finding the requisite minimum contacts in this case.
In Remide the plaintiff, a Pennsylvania lawyer, sued several individuals for defamation arising out of two letters sent to the plaintiff in Pennsylvania containing oblique charges of incompetence and accusations that the plaintiff was engaged in extortion of the defendants. 49 The letters concerned the termination of the plaintiffs representation of onе of the defendants, a professional boxer. 50 One of the two letters was read by individuals other than the plaintiff when it was faxed to the plaintiffs Philadelphia office. 51 The court held, however, that since there was nothing in the letter to indicate that it was targeted at Pennsylvania residents other than the plaintiff, personal jurisdiction could not be obtained under Calder. 52 Furthermore, the court noted that allegations that the charges in the letter had been distributed throughout the “boxing community” were insufficient, because there was no assertion that Pennsylvania had a “unique relationship with the boxing industry, as distinguished from the relationship in Calder between California and the motion picture industry, with which the Calder plaintiff was associated.” 53
Similarly, in Young v. New Haven Advoc ate, 54 two newspapers in Connecticut posted on the internet articles about the *475 housing of Connecticut prisoners in Virginia that allegedly defamed a Virginia prison warden. The Fourth Circuit held that Virginia could not exercise personal jurisdiction over the Connecticut defendants because “they did not manifest an intent to aim their websites or the posted articles at a Virginia audience.” 55 Following its decision in ALS Scan, Inc. v. Digital Service Consultants, 56 it reasoned that “application of Calder in the Internet context requires proof that the out-of-state defendant’s Internet activity is expressly directed at or directed to the forum state.” 57 It observed that more than simply making the news article accessible to Virginians by defendants’ posting of the article on their internet sites was needed for assertion of jurisdiction: “The newspapers must, through the Internet postings, manifest an intent to target and focus on Virginia readers.” 58
As with Remick and Young, the post to the bulletin board here was presumably directed at the entire world, or perhaps just concerned U.S. citizens. But certainly it was not directed specifically at Texas, which has no especial relationship to the Pan Am 103 incident. Furthermore, here thеre is nothing to compare to the targeting of California readers represented by approximately 600,000 copies of the Enquirer the Calder defendants knew would be distributed in California, the Enquirer ’s largest market. 59
3
As these cases aptly demonstrate, one cannot purposefully avail oneself of “some forum someplace”; rather, as the Supreme Court has stated, due process requires that “the defendant’s conduct and connection with the forum State are such that he should reаsonably anticipate being haled into court there.” 60 Lidov’s affidavit, un-controverted by the record, states that he did not even know that Revell was a resident of Texas when he posted his article. Knowledge of the particular forum in which a potential plaintiff will bear the brunt of the harm forms an essential part of the Calder test. 61 The defendant must be chargeable with knowledge of the forum at which his conduct is directed in order to reаsonably anticipate being haled into court in that forum, as Calder itself 62 and numerous cases from other circuits applying Calder confirm. 63 Demanding knowl *476 edge of a particular forum to which conduct is directed, in defamation cases, is not altogether distinct from the requirement that the forum be the focal point of the tortious activity because satisfaction of the latter will ofttimes provide sufficient evidence of the former.
Lidov must have known that the harm of the article would hit home wherever Revell resided. But that is the case with virtually any defamation. A more direct aim is required than we have here. In short, this was not about Texas. If the article had a geographic focus it was Washington, D.C.
Ill
Our ultimate inquiry is rooted in the limits imposed on states by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. It is fairness judged by the reasonableness of Texas exercising its power over residents of Massachusetts and New York. This inquiry into fairness captures the reаsonableness of hauling a defendant from his home state before the court of a sister state; in the main a pragmatic account of reasonable expectations — if you are going to pick a fight in Texas, it is reasonable to expect that it be settled there. It is not fairness calibrated by the likelihood of success on the merits or relative fault. Rather, we look to the geographic focus of the article, not the bite of the defamation, the blackness of the calumny, or who provoked the fight.
Revell also makes various evidentiary objections to the affidavits introduced by the defendants to support their motions to dismiss. We conclude that all of these lack merit, and the district court did not abuse its discretion in rejecting them. 64 Alternatively, Revell asks that we remand for further discovery, but given the uncon-troverted facts of the оperation of Columbia’s website, and lack of purposeful availment, we must decline to do so. 65
IV
In sum, Revell has failed to make out a prima fade case of personal jurisdiction over either defendant. General jurisdiction cannot be obtained over Columbia. Considering both the “effects” test of Calder and the low-level of interactivity of the internet bulletin board, we find the contacts with Texas insufficient to establish the jurisdiction of its courts, and hence the federal district court in Texas, over Columbia and Lidov. We AFFIRM the dismissal for lack of personal jurisdiction as to both defendants.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
Felch v. Transportes Lar-Mex
SA
De CV,
.
Kelly v. Syria Shell Petroleum Dev. B.V.,
.
Alpine View Co. Ltd. v. Atlas Copco AB,
.
Stuart v. Spademan,
.
Latshaw v. Johnston,
.
Electrosource, Inc. v. Horizon Battery Techs., Ltd.,
.
Mink
v.
AAAA Dev. LLC,
.
Wilson v. Belin,
.
Mink,
. Lewis v. Fresne, 252 F.3d 352, 358 (5th Cir.2001) (internal quotation marks omitted).
. The district court did not address Revell’s general jurisdiction argument. It was made and we reach the issue.
Singleton v. Wulff,
.
.
Mink,
.
Zippo,
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
.
Access Telecom, Inc. v. MCI Telecomm. Corp.,
.
See Wilson v. Belin,
.
.
Id.
at 447-48,
. Id.
.
. Id. at 873-74.
. More precisely, there were 17 subscriptions by Texas residents in 2000 and 18 for the first two issues in 2001. R. at 305.
.
Zippo Mfg. Co. v. Zippo Dot Com, Inc.,
.
See Indianapolis Colts v. Metro. Balt. Football Club Ltd. P'ship,
.
. We need not decide today whether or not a “Zippo-passive” site could still give rise to personal jurisdiction under Calder, and reserve this difficult question for another time.
. Lewis v. Fresne, 252 F.3d 352, 358 (5th Cir.2001).
.
Mink
v.
AAAA Dev. LLC,
. Id. at 337.
.
See, e.g., Barrett v. Catacombs Press,
.
Calder,
.
Id.
at 789,
.
Id.
at 788-89,
.
Id.
at 789-90,
.
Panda Brandywine Corp. v. Potomac Elec. Power Co.,
.
Calder,
.
See Panda Brandywine,
.
.
.
. 23 F.3dat 1112.
.Id. at 1119-20.
. Id. at 1120. The court also cited two distinctions arguably not present in this case: that the plaintiff’s professional reputation was not centered in Ohio, and that the defendant did not itself publish or circulate the report in Ohio. Id. However, the defendant in Reynolds clearly knew that the plaintiff was an Ohio resident, unlike Lidov. See Part II.D.3.
. The Tenth Circuit has suggested that this is not a requirement of
Calder.
In
Burt v. Board of Regents of University of Nebraska,
.
Remick,
. Id.
. Id. at 257.
. Id. at 259.
.
Id.; see also ESAB Group, Inc. v. Centricut, Inc.,
.
. Id.
.
.
Young,
. Id.
.
Calder v. Jones,
.
Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz,
. Further evidence that the
Calder
defendants knew that the harm of their conduct would be felt in California came from their knowledge that the
Enquirer
enjoyed its largest circulation there.
Id.
at 789,
.
Calder,
.
See, e.g., Bancroft & Masters, Inc. v. Augusta Nat’l Inc.,
.
Coury v. Prot,
.
Alpine View Co. Ltd. v. Atlas Copco AB,
