AOL v. CN Productions, Inc. Complaint UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA, ALEXANDRIA DIVISION AMERICA ONLINE, INC. v. CN PRODUCTIONS, INC., and JAY NELSON, CIVIL ACTION NO. 98-552-A AMERICA ONLINES COMPLAINT FOR VIOLATION OF THE LANHAM ACT; COMPUTER FRAUD AND ABUSE ACT; VIRGINIA COMPUTER CRIMES ACT; AND THE COMMON LAW OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA NATURE OF PLAINTIFFS CLAIMS 1. Defendants CN Productions, Inc. and Jay Nelson and parties acting in concert with them (collectively, "Defendants and their agents"), have repeatedly bombarded America Online, Inc. ("AOL") and its members with tens of thousands of deceptive, unsolicited, and unwanted Internet electronic mail ("e-mail") messages. Defendants junk e-mail advertises Internet Web sites such as "pamsplayhouse.com" and "fantasiesinc.com" at which Defendants make available a variety of pornographic products and services. Defendants and their agents have indiscriminately transmitted this pornographic junk e-mail through the Internet to AOL, without regard to the fact that many underage AOL members receive these unwanted advertisements for Defendants sexually explicit Web sites. Despite demands by AOL that they cease sending their unsolicited e-mail, Defendants and their agents have refused to stop these mass mailings and have persisted in using deceptive techniques designed to frustrate AOLs ability to detect and filter these e-mail messages. Among other things, Defendants and their agents forge "aol.com" within their e-mail messages so the messages falsely appear to originate from an AOL member. The use of "aol.com" creates the misperception among AOL members that AOL condones or tolerates the highly criticized practice of sending unsolicited bulk e-mail and the sexually explicit services offered by Defendants. Defendants and their agents junk e-mail has resulted in thousands of member complaints and has clogged AOLs computers and computer system, co-opting valuable computer and staff resources needed to deliver legitimate Internet e-mails. 2. Defendants and their agents indiscriminate mass mailings and deceptive practices cause serious and irreparable injury to AOL by impairing the functioning of AOLs e-mail system and harming AOLs business reputation and goodwill among its members. Defendants have violated the Lanham Act (15 U.S.C. § 1051 et seq.), the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (18 U.S.C. § 1030 et seq.), and the Virginia Computer Crimes Act (Va. Code Ann. § 18.2-152.2 et seq.), and have trespassed upon AOLs personal property in violation of Virginia common law. Moreover, Defendants have conspired with others to engage in unlawful conduct in violation of Virginia common law. 3. AOL has demanded that Defendants and their agents stop their mass mailings, and AOL has tried to stop Defendants misappropriation of its computers and computer system through technical means, but its attempts at self-help have proven unsuccessful. By this action, AOL seeks an injunction to prevent further unlawful conduct, and compensatory and punitive damages. THE PARTIES AOL 4. AOL is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Delaware with its principal place of business at 22000 AOL Way, Dulles, Virginia 20166. AOL provides a proprietary, content-based online service. AOL owns and maintains computers and other devices that enable its members to obtain various services, including access to the Internet. Its central computer system, which includes specialized computers (called "servers") that process e-mail messages, is located in Reston, Virginia. E-mail sent to and from AOL members is processed through and stored on these computers. AOLs computers in Virginia likewise provide the functionality for, and maintain the content of, the AOL service provided throughout the United States and abroad. 5. AOL has used as a trademark and as a service mark the initials "AOL," in various forms and styles, continuously in commerce to identify its products and services since October 1989. This mark has been registered since July 2, 1996 as a trademark upon the Principal Register of the United States Patent and Trademark Office as United States Registration No. 1,984,337. The mark has been registered since June 4, 1996 as a service mark upon the Principal Register of the United States Patent and Trademark Office as United States Registration No. 1,977,731. These registrations are attached at Exhibit A hereto. 6. AOL has invested substantial resources to promote and protect the AOL trademark and service mark in connection with the interstate and worldwide sale of its products and services. 7. AOL has registered the domain name "aol.com" with the InterNIC. This domain name is used extensively in interstate commerce and is recognized worldwide as a source identifier of AOLs online services. CN Productions, Inc. and Jay Nelson 8. On information and belief, CN Productions, Inc. ("CN Productions") is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Illinois, with its principal place of business at P.O. Box 6944, Rockford, Illinois 61125. 9. On information and belief, CN Productions operates and transacts business, or has operated and transacted business, from numerous InterNIC-registered Internet domains, including the following: "barevideo.com"; "virtualgirls.com"; "sultansharem.com"; "modemmadams.com"; "virtualvoyeurs.com"; "virtualthrills.com"; "cyberpeek.com"; "cyberthrills.com"; "madampams.com"; "fantasiesinc.com"; "skinpeeks.com"; "bedroomwindow.com"; "pamsplayhouse.com"; "dawnsdungeon.com"; "bytebabes.com"; "webwomen.com"; "temptationstation.com"; "cybersensual.com"; "passionatevideo.com"; "cyberellas.com"; "virtualvirgins.com"; "modemmaidens.com"; "videosextacy.com"; "videoladies.com"; "videopleasure.com"; "bedroomvideo.com"; "sordidvideo.com"; "videoerotica.com"; "lustyladies.com"; "babequest.com"; and "videofantasy.com." 10. On information and belief, Jay Nelson is a citizen of Illinois who resides at 419 N. Gardiner Avenue, Rockford, Illinois 61107. He operates and transacts business, or has operated and transacted business, under the corporate name "CN Productions," using the numerous InterNIC-registered Internet domains listed above. 11. On information and belief, CN Productions and Jay Nelson jointly operate and transact business from the aforementioned domains, acting in concert with one another and with third party contractors and/or with agents unknown to AOL to send unsolicited bulk e-mail to AOL and its members. JURISDICTION AND VENUE 12. This action arises out of, among other things, Defendants violation of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1051 et seq. The Court has subject matter jurisdiction of this action based on 15 U.S.C. § 1121(a) and 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1332 and 1338, and has supplemental jurisdiction of plaintiff AOLs state law claims based on 28 U.S.C. § 1367. 13. Venue is proper in this judicial district pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b) and this Court has personal jurisdiction over Defendants because Defendants have caused tortious injury in this Eastern District of Virginia, and because a substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to AOLs claims, together with a substantial part of the property that is the subject of AOLs claims, are situated in this judicial district. 14. On information and belief, Defendants, either individually or through their agents, have transmitted or caused to be transmitted junk e-mail to AOLs computers and computer system, which are physically present in this district. THE INTERNET 15. Defendants and their agents committed the acts complained of herein through their use of the electronic messaging capabilities of the Internet. The Internet is a complex "network of networks" which interconnects innumerable smaller groups of linked computers. The networks that constitute this network of networks are connected in a manner that permits any computer on the Internet to communicate with any other computer on the Internet. 16. The Internet makes it possible for a user rapidly to exchange e-mail with other Internet users in the United States and abroad. E-mail can be sent virtually instantaneously from one individual to another, or from an individual user to a large group of addresses. The Internets e-mail functionality makes it possible for a sender easily to transmit tens and even hundreds of thousands of copies of a single message. 17. The InterNIC, a consortium run by the National Science Foundation, is responsible for assigning the unique addresses used by computers to communicate through the Internet. These unique addresses are referred to as Internet Protocol ("IP") addresses. Like the unique street addresses and telephone numbers used by individuals and businesses for their mail and telephone communications, IP addresses ensure orderly communications between computer networks on the Internet. An IP address is comprised of 4 sets of up to 3 numbers in the following format: 123.123.123.123. 18. The InterNIC also assigns "domain" names to individuals, businesses, and organizations using the Internet. Domain names function as convenient shorthand for users of the Internet, giving Internet users the option of using readily understandable proper names to identify themselves and their communications, rather than cumbersome twelve-digit IP addresses. Businesses, for example, are typically assigned domain names with the ".com" designation (e.g., "aol.com"), while educational and governmental organizations usually are assigned ".edu" and ".gov" domain names (e.g., "topuniversity.edu" and "federalagency.gov"). Because each domain name corresponds to a unique IP address, the InterNIC performs the important task of maintaining the directories that allow computers connected to the Internet to find the appropriate IP address for a particular domain name requested by a user. 19. An e-mail address consists of a name corresponding to the individual users account name (the "user name") and the name of the domain within which the users account is located, separated by the "@" symbol (e.g., "jdoe@company.com"). 20. E-mail messages contain "headers," generated by the senders ISP, which identify the senders return e-mail address, the messages "subject," and other information related to the transmission of the e-mail message (such as the date, time, and routing information). AOLs system is configured such that these "headers" are excerpted at the beginning of each message and appear in full text at the conclusion of the message. 21. A sender who wishes to conceal his true identity and e-mail address can falsify the header information in his e-mail transmissions or manipulate the information used in the electronic header. Various "stealth" software programs, designed for and marketed to the senders of junk e-mail, facilitate the falsification of e-mail header information in mass mailings. 22. The World Wide Web (the "Web") allows Internet users to visit "Web sites" using a communications interfacea "Web browser"that enables the user to view the text and/or pictorial contents of each Web site. Web sites bear unique domain names that enable Internet users to direct their browsers to the computer hosting the desired Web site. For example, an Internet user wishing to visit the AOL Web site at the "aol.com" domain would enter the Web address for this domain"http://www.aol.com." 23. A significant feature contributing to the Webs popularity among Internet users is its "linking" capability. Messages may be embedded with "hypertext links" to Web sites, and Web sites may in turn be embedded with hypertext links to other Web sites, making it possible for an Internet user quickly to move to and from Web sites of interest through the single click of a computer mouse. JUNK E-MAIL 24. It costs virtually nothing to transmit an e-mail message, regardless of the number of recipients. Considerable resources are expended by the ISP at the receiving end, however, storing, sorting, and delivering the e-mail. 25. Although the sender of junk mail sent through the postal system must pay the costs of delivery through the purchase of stamps, there are no stamps on the Internet. Instead, the costs of storing, sorting, and delivering junk e-mail are borne involuntarily by the recipients ISP, and ultimately the recipients themselves. When computer and staff resources are consumed by massive batches of junk e-mail, the delivery of legitimate, authorized e-mail is often impaired. 26. Bulk e-mailers engage in the practice precisely because the medium permits them to shift their marketing costs onto the recipients ISPs, such as AOL. The ability to send junk e-mail from "throw away" Internet accounts or with falsified headers, and thereby avoid accountability to the consumer, has made junk e-mailing an irresistibly tempting marketing method for disreputable would-be entrepreneurs peddling get-rich schemes and dubious, often pornographic, products and services. 27. The practice of unsolicited bulk e-mailing is widely condemned in the Internet community. AOLs Terms of Service specifically prohibit AOL members from using their AOL accounts to send unsolicited bulk e-mail, and expressly reserve AOLs right to block unsolicited e-mail sent to its members from the Internet. In addition, AOLs Terms of Service prohibit members from harvesting or collecting the e-mail addresses of other AOL members. 28. On information and belief, Defendants, either individually or through their agents, maintain or have maintained a membership with AOL, which membership has been used to facilitate the collection or "harvesting" of members e-mail addresses. JUNK E-MAIL CAUSES SUBSTANTIAL HARM TO AOLS COMPUTER SYSTEM AND BUSINESS REPUTATION 29. AOLs e-mail system was created solely for the benefit of AOL members, who pay prescribed fees and who agree to adhere to AOLs Terms of Service. The e-mail system is operated through dedicated servers that store and route e-mail messages between AOLs members. AOL permits its members to use the "aol.com" domain name, which when combined with a unique user name gives each member a distinctive e-mail address from which to exchange e-mail with Internet users (e.g., "member96@aol.com"). 30. Any e-mail that is sent through the Internet to an AOL address is first received and sorted by AOLs mail servers. The AOL mail system has a finite capacity designed to accommodate the demands imposed by AOLs members. AOLs computers and computer system are not designed to accommodate, and are vulnerable to disruption by, Defendants and others indiscriminate mass mailings of unsolicited e-mail. AOL has been forced to devote thousands of hours of staff time to address member complaints about this unsolicited e-mail and millions of dollars for new equipment to process the mass mailings. 31. The repeated transmission of massive batches of unsolicited e-mail messages by Defendants and other junk e-mailers also degrades the performance of AOLs computers and computer system, forcing AOL to divert computer processing resources away from the handling of authorized e-mail for AOL members. The aggregation of time required to process these bulk e-mail transmissions slows the "delivery" of all e-mail to AOL members, and has at times resulted in significant delays in members receipt of their e-mail from the Internet. 32. The transmission of unsolicited bulk e-mail by Defendants and other junk e-mailers also results in a substantial quantity of mail sent to invalid e-mail addresses, which causes additional harm to the performance of AOLs computers and computer system. For each message that contains undeliverable recipients, AOLs computers must attempt to transmit a message back to the originating site of the e-mail message to inform it of the delivery failure. Attempts to send such "bounce" messages back to the senders computers consume considerable processing resources within AOLs computers and computer system. 33. AOL has undertaken various technical efforts to permit its members to opt out of receiving messages from domains and IP addresses that are or have been the subject of member complaints regarding unsolicited bulk e-mail. These methods, however, rely on truthful e-mailing practices to be successful. When senders, such as Defendants and their agents, mail from multiple and varying domains, employ random and varying user names, relay their messages through the servers of innocent third parties, or falsify the headers on their e-mails to indicate that their messages are from domains that AOL does not or cannot filter (e.g. "msn.com" or "aol.com"), AOLs computers and computer system cannot detect and filter the e-mail. 34. The practice of sending unsolicited commercial e-mail through AOLs computers and computer system has the effect of unfairly shifting to AOL and its members the costs of transmitting these promotional messages. It is AOL, rather than the junk e-mailer, that pays the costs of the additional computer and staff resources that must be devoted to the processing of the massive batches of e-mail that junk e-mailers transmit through AOLs computers and computer system. AOL members also pay for these unwanted bulk messages in time and effort wasted in opening, reading, and discarding the messages. 35. Junk e-mailers activities have particularly adverse consequences for those AOL members who pay for their access to AOLs online services and e-mail capability in increments of time. Time spent by such a member accessing, reviewing, and discarding junk e-mail messages is paid for by the member according to the members hourly billing rates. These AOL members thus end up paying twice for the activities of junk e-mailers, through the increased costs and delays in AOLs operations occasioned by the processing of mass quantities of e-mail, and through increased monthly billings for their connection time with AOL. The costs of member dissatisfaction ultimately are borne by AOL, in lost business and harm to its reputation and goodwill. 36. The receipt of unsolicited, unwanted e-mail is the number one complaint voiced by AOL members about the Internet e-mail system. AOL receives more than one hundred thousand such complaints per day. DEFENDANTS AND THEIR AGENTS JUNK E-MAILING PRACTICES 37. In recent months, Defendants and their agents have misappropriated vast mailing lists of AOL members e-mail addresses and repeatedly transmittedat virtually no cost to Defendantssubstantial quantities of unsolicited e-mail solicitations through AOLs computers and computer system to AOLs members. These messages promote Web sites at which Defendants offer pornographic materials, including "live sex conferencing." The promotional messages that Defendants and their agents direct to AOL members incorporate hypertext links that make it possible for the AOL member recipient to visit Defendants Web sites with a single click of a computer mouse. The e-mail that contains such a hypertext link functions not only as an advertisement, but also as a direct point of access to the adult entertainment services offered by Defendants at their Web sites. Defendants and their agents mass mailings are particularly pernicious because they are sent indiscriminately to minors as well as adults and demand no verification of age before the recipient is transported via hypertext links to Web sites containing sexually explicit solicitations for Defendants services and products. 38. Defendants and their agents also employ misleading subject lines that are completely unrelated to the actual content of the messages in order to trick AOL members into opening their unwanted solicitations. For example, during the holidays Defendants sent messages, purportedly from "XmasSantaX@aol.com," with the subject line "Happy Holidays." Many AOL members have complained about this practice. Attached hereto at Exhibit B are examples of such complaints. 39. After receiving thousands of member complaints, AOL demanded by letter dated December 8, 1997 that Defendants, and their agents cease and desist sending unsolicited e-mail to AOL and its members. Defendants have ignored AOLs demands. In recent weeks, AOL has received thousands of additional complaints from members who have received CN Productions junk e-mail. A few such complaints, with the offending messages attached, are appended at Exhibit C hereto. 40. On at least one of the Web sites referenced in their e-mail messages, "videofantasy.com," Defendants also advertise their "site partner program," inviting third parties to promote CN Productions Web sites in exchange for "40% commissions on all revenues generated by your referrals." On information and belief, third parties with whom Defendants have participated in this "site partner program" have, with training and/or support from Defendants, sent unauthorized, unsolicited bulk e-mail to and through AOLs computers and computer system to AOL members by deceptive means. False and Deceptive Practices 41. Defendants and their agents employ false and deceptive practices to mask their identities, and the source and quantity of their transmissions, and thereby evade AOLs electronic filtering mechanisms and avoid receiving the thousands of "bounced" messages and complaints associated with their mass e-mailings. For example, instead of transmitting from one consistent domain and using one consistent user name, Defendants and their agents transmit from numerous, constantly varying domains and employ randomly generated user names, making it appear as though their messages come from a number of different sources rather than one particular (traceable) account. 42. Defendants and their agents also intentionally forge the headers in the electronic return addresses of their messages to conceal the domains from which they operate and transmit their e-mail. Often, Defendants and their agents use the domain name "aol.com" or the domain name of another well-known ISP in their messages to make it appear as though their messages are sent from a member of AOL or another well-known ISP. To mask the quantity of messages they send, Defendants and their agents append different sets of names and numerals-which seem to have been automatically generated by a computer program-to those forged domain names, making it appear as though the messages were sent from different accounts within the forged domain. The purpose and effect of these practices is to prevent AOL from using technical means to block the unsolicited e-mail messages before they are delivered. 43. When Defendants and their agents incorporate AOLs registered mark and domain name in the return addresses of their messages, it creates the false and damaging misperception among the AOL members who receive these messages that AOL endorses or condones Defendants unsolicited bulk e-mail practices and the pornographic services they promote. The complaints attached at Exhibit D hereto contain examples of Defendants and their agents "aol.com" forgery and evidence the member confusion caused by Defendants and their agents misappropriation of AOLs domain name and registered mark. 44. Defendants and their agents transmission of unsolicited bulk e-mail to AOL has damaged, and continues each day to damage, AOLs business, its goodwill, and its relationship with its members. AOLs valuable trademark and service mark and associated goodwill also are diluted and damaged by their wrongful association with pornographic junk e-mail and junk e-mailers like Defendants. COUNT I 45. AOL repeats and realleges the allegations of paragraphs 1 through 44 of the Complaint. 46. Defendants and their agents have engaged in acts of unfair competition by falsely and without authorization using AOLs domain name "aol.com" in the electronic headers of their unsolicited e-mail messages in connection with Defendants sale, offering for sale, and distribution in interstate commerce of Defendants adult entertainment services. Defendants and their agents use of "aol.com" amounts to a false representation that AOL is the point of origin of Defendants unsolicited, unwanted e-mail messages, in violation of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a). 47. Particularly because "aol.com" incorporates and bears AOLs registered trademark and service mark, Defendants and their agents misappropriation of AOLs domain name is likely to cause confusion and to deceive AOL members and others into the erroneous belief that AOL is connected to, affiliated with, approves of, or condones Defendants and their agents indiscriminate, unsolicited e-mail practices and pornographic services, causing serious and irreparable damage to AOL in the form of lost goodwill and business reputation. 48. It is difficult to ascertain the amount of compensation that could afford AOL adequate relief for Defendants continuing acts. AOLs remedy at law is inadequate to compensate it for the ongoing injuries caused by such acts. COUNT II 49. AOL repeats and realleges the allegations of paragraphs 1 through 48 of the Complaint. 50. In connection with its provision of online and Internet services, AOL has registered and used extensively in interstate commerce the registered mark "AOL," which identifies its Internet and online services and which qualifies as a "famous" mark within the meaning of 15 U.S.C. § 1125(c)(1). 51. Defendants and their agents have knowingly and willfully, without AOLs consent or authorization, reproduced, counterfeited, and used the registered mark "AOL" after this mark became famous in interstate commerce, in connection with Defendants sale, offering for sale, and distribution of Defendants pornographic services. 52. Defendants and their agents intentional and unauthorized use of the "AOL" mark in connection with its unsolicited messages is likely to dilute AOLs interest in the registered "AOL" mark, in violation of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(c)(1), by linking the "AOL" mark to pornography and the transmission of unsolicited bulk e-mail, a practice which is widely condemned by the Internet community and which AOL does not maintain, tolerate, or condone. COUNT III 53. AOL repeats and realleges the allegations of paragraphs 1 through 52 of the Complaint. 54. In connection with its provision of online and Internet computer services to its members, who are citizens of the Commonwealth of Virginia and other states, AOL maintains computers and a computer system that are "protected computers" as the term is defined in 18 U.S.C. § 1030(e)(2)(B) because they are used in interstate commerce and communication. 55. AOLs Terms of Service specifically prohibit AOL members from using their AOL accounts to harvest or collect the e-mail addresses of other AOL members. 56. On information and belief, Defendants and their agents maintain or have maintained an AOL membership and have used that membership to harvest or collect the e-mail addresses of other AOL members. 57. Defendants and their agents have intentionally "exceeded authorized access," as that term is defined in 18 U.S.C. § 1030(e)(6), to AOLs protected computers by harvesting or collecting the e-mail addresses of other AOL members, have obtained information via an interstate communication to which they were not entitled, and thereby have violated 18 U.S.C. § 1030(a)(2). 58. By exceeding authorized access to AOLs protected computers, Defendants and their agents have caused AOL loss or damage aggregating at least $5,000 during a one-year period preceding the filing of this complaint. 59. Defendants and their agents threaten to continue to engage in the unlawful actions alleged herein, and unless restrained and enjoined will continue to do so, causing irreparable harm to AOL. It is difficult to ascertain the amount of compensation that could afford AOL adequate relief for Defendants and their agents continuing unlawful acts. AOLs remedy at law is, therefore, inadequate to compensate for the injuries threatened. COUNT IV 60. AOL repeats and realleges the allegations of paragraphs 1 through 59 of the Complaint. 61. In connection with the provision of online and Internet services to its members, AOL owns and maintains one or more "protected computers" as the term is defined in the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1030(e)(2)(B), through which e-mail transmissions are received, stored and disseminated in interstate and/or foreign commerce or communication ("AOLs protected computer facilities"). 62. In the year preceding the date of the filing of this Complaint, Defendants and their agents repeatedly transmitted to AOLs protected computer facilities batches of unsolicited commercial e-mail messages without valid authorization. On each occasion on which Defendants and their agents transmitted these batches of unsolicited commercial e-mail messages, Defendants and their agents knew that the transmission of these e-mail messages would impair the operation of AOLs protected computer facilities and AOLs provision of e-mail services to its members. 63. In transmitting these batches of tens of thousands of unsolicited commercial e-mail messages, Defendants and their agents knowingly falsified portions of the Internet "header" information, and engaged in other deceptive practices, for the purpose of attempting to conceal from AOL and its members the actual domain and IP address which served as the point of origin of the transmission. 64. Defendants and their agents knowingly and intentionally caused the transmission of information to, and accessed, AOLs protected computer facilities without authorization, and as a result of such conduct, caused damage, or recklessly caused damage in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1030 (a)(5). 65. The damages suffered by AOL as a result of Defendants and their agents conduct include the impairment of the integrity and/or availability of data, programs, systems, and/or information in AOLs protected computer facilities, and aggregate to at least $5,000 in value in the year preceding the date of filing of this Complaint. 66. Defendants and their agents threaten to continue to engage in the unlawful transmissions complained of herein, and unless restrained and enjoined will continue to do so, impairing the services provided to AOL members and causing AOL irreparable damage. Because of Defendants and their agents pattern and practice of employing aliases and using numerous and varying domain names and IP addresses from which to carry out their unlawful transmissions, AOL will otherwise be obliged to maintain multiple actions to prevent these activities. It is difficult to ascertain the amount of compensation that could afford AOL adequate relief for Defendants and their agents continuing unlawful acts. AOLs remedy at law is inadequate to compensate for the injuries threatened. COUNT V 67. AOL repeats and realleges the allegations of paragraphs 1 through 66 of the Complaint. 68. In connection with the provision of online and Internet computer services to its members who are citizens of the Commonwealth of Virginia and other States, AOL maintains in the Commonwealth of Virginia computers and a computer system that are "property" within the meaning of Va. Code Ann. § 18.2-152.2. 69. Without authority, Defendants and their agents have repeatedly transmitted huge batches of unsolicited commercial e-mail messages to AOLs computers and computer system in the Commonwealth of Virginia. 70. In transmitting these batches of unsolicited commercial e-mail messages, Defendants and their agents knowingly falsified portions of the Internet "header" information on their e-mail messages for the purpose of attempting to conceal from AOL and its members the actual domain and IP address which served as the point of origin of the transmission. 71. Without authority, Defendants and their agents have obtained access to and used AOLs computers and computer system with the intent to obtain the use of AOLs property and services by false pretenses, in violation of Va. Code. Ann. § 18.2-152.3. 72. The foregoing acts of Defendants and their agents have caused injury to AOL, AOLs computers and computer system, and to AOLs business relations, reputation and goodwill. 73. Defendants threaten to continue to engage in the unlawful transmissions complained of herein, and unless restrained and enjoined will continue to do so, impairing the services provided to AOL members and causing AOL irreparable damage. It is difficult to ascertain the amount of compensation that could afford AOL adequate relief for Defendants continuing unlawful acts. AOLs remedy at law is, therefore, inadequate to compensate for the injuries threatened. COUNT VI 74. AOL repeats and realleges the allegations of paragraphs 1 through 73 of the Complaint. 75. The computers and computer system that constitute AOLs e-mail system are the personal property of AOL. 76. Without valid authorization, Defendants and their agents have intentionally and repeatedly obtained access to, and made use, of AOLs computers and computer system to transmit unsolicited commercial e-mail to AOL members, for Defendants own economic benefit. 77. Through their practice and pattern of repeatedly transmitting unsolicited commercial e-mail in high volume through AOLs computers and computer system, Defendants and their agents have wrongfully exercised dominion over AOLs computers and computer system in denial of AOLs rights to that property. Defendants wrongful exercise of dominion over AOLs computers and computer system has deprived AOL and its customers of the legitimate use of this commercially valuable system. 78. Under the common law of Virginia, Defendants conduct constitutes trespass to AOLs chattels. 79. As a result of Defendants trespass to AOLs chattels, AOL has suffered and will continue to suffer irreparable injury, loss of reputation and pecuniary damages. AOLs damages include not only pecuniary injury, but the loss of its customers and the loss of the good will of its existing customers. Unless enjoined by this Court, Defendants will continue these acts of trespass, thereby causing AOL continuing and irreparable damage. 80. Defendants acts of trespass have been undertaken intentionally with malice, oppression and fraud, justifying the imposition of punitive damages in amount sufficient to punish Defendants and deter Defendants and others from engaging in similar conduct. COUNT VII 81. AOL repeats and realleges the allegations of paragraphs 1 through 80 of the Complaint. 82. On information and belief, Defendants have conspired and combined with third parties to send unauthorized bulk e-mails to and through AOLs computers and computer system to AOL members, using false pretenses for the purpose of concealing from AOL the source and actual quantity of messages sent, and causing damage by impairing the operation of AOLs computers and computer systems and impairing AOLs provision of e-mail services to its members in violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. 83. On information and belief, Defendants have conspired and combined with third parties to send unauthorized bulk e-mails to and through AOLs computers and computer system to AOL members, wrongfully exercising dominion over AOLs computers and computer system, and depriving AOL and its members of the legitimate use of this commercially valuable system, and thereby committing trespass to chattels under Virginia common law. 84. On information and belief, Defendants have conspired and combined with third parties to transmit unsolicited commercial e-mail messages to and through AOLs computers and computer system located in the Commonwealth of Virginia, using false pretenses for the purposes of concealing from AOL the source and actual quantity of messages sent, and obtaining access to and use of AOLs computers and computer system with the intent to obtain property and computer services in violation of the Virginia Computer Crimes Act. 85. The effectuation of these conspiracies through the transmission by Defendants co-conspirators of unauthorized bulk e-mail to and through AOLs computers and computer system has damaged AOL and its protected computer systems by impairing the integrity and/or availability of data, programs, systems, and/or information, and has damaged AOLs business relations, reputation, and goodwill among its members. PRAYER FOR RELIEF WHEREFORE, Plaintiff AOL requests entry of judgment in its favor and against Defendants: a). Granting preliminary and permanent injunctive relief against Defendants and all persons acting in concert or participation with them, enjoining them from: (1) Acquiring or compiling AOL member addresses for the purpose of transmitting unsolicited e-mail to those AOL members or engaging in any other actions that result in the receipt of any unwanted mail by AOL and its members; (2) Sending any unsolicited e-mail to AOL or its members or engaging in any other actions that result in the receipt of any unwanted mail by AOL and its members; (3) Sending any e-mail to AOL or its members bearing any false, fraudulent, anonymous, inactive, deceptive or invalid header information, or otherwise using any other artifice, scheme or method of transmission that would prevent the automatic return of undeliverable electronic mail to its original and true point of origin; (4) Using any AOL-registered trademark, service mark, or registered domain name, or other symbol or representation, in their e-mail transmissions or in any other way that falsely indicates that AOL has endorsed or approved Defendants products or services, that AOL is affiliated with or connected in any way to Defendants businesses, or that any e-mail from Defendants originated from, or was transmitted through or by, AOL or any of its members; b) Awarding AOL compensatory damages, in an amount to be proven at trial, caused by Defendants violation of the Lanham Act, the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, the Virginia Computer Crimes Act, and Virginia common law; c) Awarding AOL punitive damages against Defendants, in an amount sufficient to punish and deter these Defendants and others from similar malicious, oppressive, and fraudulent conduct in the future; d) Awarding AOL and its attorneys its costs and attorneys fees in prosecuting this action; and e) Granting AOL such other or additional relief as this Court deems just and proper under the circumstances. Dated: April 16, 1998 By: ________________________________ LATHAM & WATKINS AMERICA ONLINE, INC.
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