Filmon.Com. Inc. v. Doubleverify Inc. , 7 Cal. 5th 133 ( 2019 )


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  •         IN THE SUPREME COURT OF
    CALIFORNIA
    FILMON.COM INC.,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    v.
    DOUBLEVERIFY INC.,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    S244157
    Second Appellate District, Division Three
    B264074
    Los Angeles County Superior Court
    BC561987
    May 6, 2019
    Justice Cuéllar authored the opinion of the court, in which
    Chief Justice Cantil-Sakauye and Justices Chin, Corrigan, Liu,
    Kruger, and Groban concurred.
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    S244157
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    The Legislature enacted Code of Civil Procedure section
    425.16 to address so-called strategic lawsuits against public
    participation (SLAPP). (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16 [the anti-
    SLAPP statute].)1 This anti-SLAPP statute makes available a
    special motion to strike meritless claims early in
    litigation — but only if the claims arise from acts in furtherance
    of a person’s “right of petition or free speech under the United
    States Constitution or the California Constitution in connection
    with a public issue.” (§ 425.16, subd. (b).) In a catchall provision
    relevant to this case, the statute specifies that such acts include
    “conduct in furtherance of the exercise of the constitutional right
    of petition or the constitutional right of free speech in connection
    with a public issue or an issue of public interest.” (§ 425.16,
    subd. (e)(4).) But nowhere does the statute further define these
    terms.
    FilmOn.com Inc. (FilmOn) is a for-profit business entity
    that distributes web-based entertainment programming. In this
    case, FilmOn sued DoubleVerify Inc. (DoubleVerify), another
    for-profit business entity that offers online tracking, verification
    and “brand safety” services to Internet advertisers. FilmOn
    alleged that DoubleVerify disparaged its digital distribution
    network in confidential reports to DoubleVerify’s paying clients.
    DoubleVerify responded by filing an anti-SLAPP motion to
    strike.
    1
    All further undesignated statutory references are to the
    Code of Civil Procedure.
    1
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    We granted review to decide whether the commercial
    nature of a defendant’s speech is relevant in determining
    whether that speech merits protection under the catchall
    provision. To resolve this question, we also clarify how the
    context of a statement more broadly — including the identity of
    the speaker, the audience, and the purpose of the
    speech — informs the same analysis.
    What we hold is that the context of a defendant’s
    statement is relevant, though not dispositive, in analyzing
    whether the statement was made “in furtherance of” free speech
    “in connection with” a public issue. (§ 425.16, subd. (e)(4).) In
    an age of easy public access to previously private information
    through social media and other means, context allows us to
    assess the functional relationship between a statement and the
    issue of public interest on which it touches — deciding, in the
    process, whether it merits protection under a statute designed
    to “encourage continued participation in matters of public
    significance.” (§ 425.16, subd. (a).)
    In giving effect to this statutory purpose, we find that
    DoubleVerify’s reports — generated for profit, exchanged
    confidentially, without being part of any attempt to participate
    in a larger public discussion — do not qualify for anti-SLAPP
    protection under the catchall provision, even where the topic
    discussed is, broadly speaking, one of public interest. This is not
    because confidential statements made to serve business
    interests are categorically excluded from anti-SLAPP
    protection. It is instead because DoubleVerify’s reports are too
    tenuously tethered to the issues of public interest they
    implicate, and too remotely connected to the public conversation
    about those issues, to merit protection under the catchall
    provision.
    2
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    Because the Court of Appeal found DoubleVerify’s reports
    protected under the anti-SLAPP statute, and held that context
    is irrelevant to the anti-SLAPP analysis under subdivision
    (e)(4), we reverse.
    I.
    Internet use has become pervasive in less than a
    generation, and along with it, advertising through online
    platforms. (See Interactive Advertising Bureau, IAB Internet
    Advertising       Revenue        Report       (May       2018)
    
    [as of May 2, 2019].)2 To ensure their advertising dollars are
    wisely spent and the ads are placed on sites with content
    appropriate for their target customers, businesses monitor the
    websites on which they advertise or may wish to advertise. One
    company offering such monitoring services — which include
    collecting and packaging information about a website’s content,
    viewers, and advertising practices — is defendant DoubleVerify.
    For its large stable of clients, DoubleVerify gathers and
    provides information about the websites on which the clients are
    interested in advertising. The businesses pay for the reports
    and agree to keep them confidential. In return, they receive
    from DoubleVerify information on the location of the website’s
    viewers, whether a competitor advertises on the website, where
    the website displays advertisements, how long the
    advertisements are shown, and — crucial to this litigation — a
    description of the website’s content. Such a description comes
    2
    All Internet citations in this opinion are archived by year,
    docket         number,         and        case       name        at
    http://www.courts.ca.gov/38324.htm.
    3
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    in the form of a “tag” or “label classifying the website’s content.”
    (FilmOn.com v. DoubleVerify, Inc. (2017) 
    13 Cal.App.5th 707
    ,
    712 (FilmOn).) For instance, DoubleVerify may tag a website as
    containing “Adult Content,” which it then defines, in a glossary
    included in the report, as “ ‘ “[m]ature topics which are
    inappropriate viewing for children including explicit language,
    content, sounds and themes.” ’ ” (Ibid.) Similarly, DoubleVerify
    also has a “Copyright Infringement: Streaming or File Sharing”
    tag, defined as “ ‘ “Sites, presently or historically, associated
    with access to or distribution of copyrighted material without
    appropriate controls, licensing, or permission; including but not
    limited to, sites electronically streaming or allowing user file
    sharing of such material.” ’ ” (Ibid.)
    Some of the websites DoubleVerify labeled as containing
    “Adult Content” or “Copyright Infringement” material belonged
    to plaintiff FilmOn. FilmOn provides entertainment content on
    the web, including “hundreds of televisions channels, premium
    movie channels, pay-per-view channels and over 45,000 video-
    on-demand titles.” (FilmOn, supra, 13 Cal.App.5th at p. 712.)
    FilmOn brought this lawsuit against DoubleVerify after
    DoubleVerify allegedly distributed confidential reports to its
    clients “ ‘falsely classify[ing] FilmOn Websites under the
    categories of “Copyright Infringement-File Sharing” and
    “Adult Content.” ’ ” (Ibid.) FilmOn alleges that “as a direct
    result of [DoubleVerify’s] false and disparaging statements
    published in the [] Reports,” FilmOn incurred damages because
    “ad partners and potential ad partners have refused to advertise
    through websites in FilmOn’s network.” Claiming that its
    websites neither engage in copyright infringement nor feature
    adult content, FilmOn sued DoubleVerify for trade libel, tortious
    interference with contract, tortious interference with
    4
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    prospective economic advantage, and violation of California’s
    unfair competition law.
    DoubleVerify responded by filing an anti-SLAPP motion.
    The trial court granted the motion, and the Court of Appeal
    affirmed. The Court of Appeal agreed with the trial judge that
    DoubleVerify’s reports “concerned issues of interest to the
    public” because “the public ha[s] a demonstrable interest in
    knowing what content is available on the Internet, especially
    with respect to adult content and the illegal distribution of
    copyrighted materials.” (FilmOn, supra, 13 Cal.App.5th at pp.
    719, 714.) To support its conclusion, the court analogized
    DoubleVerify’s confidential reports to ratings by the Motion
    Picture Association of America, writing, “the Motion Picture
    Association of America (MPAA) engages in conduct quite similar
    to DoubleVerify’s activities by rating movies concerning their
    level of adult content, and the MPAA does so, because the public
    cares about the issue.” (Id. at p. 720.)
    As is relevant to our review, the court rejected the
    argument that DoubleVerify’s reports, in fact, are different from
    MPAA’s ratings. (FilmOn, supra, 13 Cal.App.5th at p. 720.)
    According to FilmOn, DoubleVerify’s reports differ from the
    MPAA’s film ratings because the latter are made widely
    available to the public, while DoubleVerify’s reports are
    delivered to individual clients, and must be kept confidential.
    The court disagreed, stating its conclusion in absolute terms: “it
    is irrelevant that DoubleVerify made its reports confidentially
    to its subscribers,” since “[n]either the identity of the speaker
    nor the identity of the audience affects the content of the
    communication, or whether that content concerns an issue of
    public interest.” (Id. at p. 723.) So, “if an ‘R’ rating for adult
    content is a matter of ‘public interest’ when communicated by
    5
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    the MPAA to the public at large, it remains a matter of public
    interest when communicated by DoubleVerify in confidential
    reports to its clients. Likewise, if FilmOn’s alleged copyright
    infringement is an issue of public interest when reported by the
    press, it remains so when included in DoubleVerify’s
    confidential reports.” (Ibid.) In short, “[w]hether a statement
    concerns an issue of public interest depends on the content of
    the statement,” and only that content, “not the statement’s
    speaker or audience.” (Id. at p. 722.)
    We granted review to decide if and how the context of a
    statement — including the identity of the speaker, the audience,
    and the purpose of the speech — informs a court’s determination
    of whether the statement was made “in furtherance of” free
    speech “in connection with” a public issue. (§ 425.16, subd.
    (e)(4).)
    II.
    A.
    The anti-SLAPP law was enacted “to protect nonprofit
    corporations and common citizens ‘from large corporate entities
    and trade associations’ in petitioning government.” (USA Waste
    of California, Inc. v. City of Irwindale (2010) 
    184 Cal.App.4th 53
    , 66.) Attempting to protect against “lawsuits brought
    primarily to chill” the exercise of speech and petition rights, the
    Legislature embedded context into the statutory preamble,
    “declar[ing] that it is in the public interest to encourage
    continued participation in matters of public significance.”
    (§ 425.16, subd. (a).)
    In the paradigmatic SLAPP suit, a well-funded developer
    limits free expression by imposing litigation costs on citizens
    who protest, write letters, and distribute flyers in opposition to
    6
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    a local project. (See Assem. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Sen.
    Bill No. 1296 (1997–1998 Reg. Sess.) as amended June 23, 1997,
    pp. 2–3; Barker, Common-Law and Statutory Solutions to the
    Problem of SLAPPs (1993) 26 Loyola L.A. L.Rev. 395, 396.)
    Identifying the problem as one involving particular litigants,
    their motivations, and the effects of litigation, the Assembly
    Committee on Judiciary observed that approximately 25 percent
    of SLAPP suits “relate to development and zoning,” while 20
    percent “arise out of complaints against public officials and
    employees.” (Assem. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Sen. Bill.
    No. 1296, supra, at p. 3.) The Committee recognized that “such
    lawsuits are often pernicious, masquerading as standard
    defamation and interference with prospective economic
    advantage litigation, while really brought by well-heeled parties
    who can afford to misuse the civil justice system to chill the
    exercise of free speech . . . by the threat of impoverishing the
    other party.” (Ibid.) To curb what it took to be the “disturbing
    increase” in such lawsuits (§ 425.16, subd. (a)), the Legislature
    shifted burdens of proof and fees onto the lawsuit filer to
    “compensate[] the prevailing defendant for the undue burden of
    defending against litigation designed to chill the exercise of free
    speech and petition rights.” (Barry v. State Bar of California
    (2017) 
    2 Cal.5th 318
    , 328.)
    Consistent with the statute’s purpose, its text defines
    conduct in furtherance of the rights of petition and free speech
    on a public issue not only by its content, but also by its location,
    its audience, and its timing. (See § 425.16, subd. (e)(1) [“before
    a legislative, executive, or judicial proceeding”]; § 425.16, subd.
    (e)(2) [“in connection with an issue under consideration or
    review by” a government entity]; § 425.16, subd. (e)(3) [“in a
    place open to the public or a public forum in connection with an
    7
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    issue of public interest”].) Indeed, we have previously noted that
    the Legislature “ ‘equated a public issue with the authorized
    official proceeding to which it connects,’ ” effectively defining the
    protected status of the statement by the context in which it was
    made. (Briggs v. Eden Council for Hope & Opportunity (1999)
    
    19 Cal.4th 1106
    , 1117, italics in original (Briggs).)
    Admittedly, the catchall provision contains no similar
    contextual references to help courts discern the type of conduct
    and speech to protect. (See § 425.16, subd. (e)(4) [“any other
    conduct in furtherance of the exercise of the constitutional
    right . . . of free speech in connection with a public issue or an
    issue of public interest”].) But we interpret statutory language
    within its context, and in light of its structure, analogous
    provisions, and any other appropriate indicia of its purpose.
    (See Poole v. Orange County Fire Authority (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 1378
    , 1385 [reading the statutory language in the context of its
    neighboring provisions]; Lungren v. Deukmejian (1988) 
    45 Cal.3d 727
    , 735 [“[T]he words must be construed in context, and
    provisions relating to the same subject matter must be
    harmonized to the extent possible.”].) Nothing in subdivision
    (e)(4) or other portions of the statute supports the conclusion
    that subdivision (e)(4) is the only subdivision where contextual
    information is excluded from consideration in discerning the
    type of conduct and speech worthy of procedural protection.
    Indeed, that the language of the provision refers to “other
    conduct in furtherance” supports the inference that this
    provision encompasses conduct and speech similar to what is
    referenced in subdivision (e)(1) through (e)(3). (§ 425.16, subd.
    (e)(4), italics added; see International Federation of Professional
    & Technical Engineers, Local 21, AFL-CIO v. Superior Court
    (2007) 
    42 Cal.4th 319
    , 342 [explaining that where a statute lists
    8
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    a series of specific categories followed by a catchall category, the
    catchall is “ ‘ “restricted to those things that are similar to those
    which are enumerated specifically” ’ ”].)
    The reference to “any other conduct” in subdivision (e)(4)
    also underscores its role as the “catchall” provision meant to
    round out the statutory safeguards for constitutionally
    protected expression. (See, e.g., Lieberman v. KCOP Television,
    Inc. (2003) 
    110 Cal.App.4th 156
    , 164 [observing that subdivision
    (e)(4) “provides a catchall”].) In protecting “any other conduct”
    that meets the requirements laid out in its text (§ 425.16,
    subd. (e)(4), italics added), subdivision (e)(4) proves both
    broader in scope than the other subdivisions, and less firmly
    anchored to any particular context. (See San Diegans for Open
    Government v. San Diego State University Research
    Foundation (2017) 
    13 Cal.App.5th 76
    , 101 (San Diegans)
    [characterizing § 425.16, subdivision (e)(4) as “a ‘catchall’ that
    extends the anti-SLAPP statutes beyond actual instances of free
    speech to ‘all conduct in furtherance of the exercise of the right
    of free speech in connection with a public issue’ ”]; Collier v.
    Harris (2015) 
    240 Cal.App.4th 41
    , 51 [same]; accord Briggs,
    
    supra,
     19 Cal.4th at p. 1122 [stating that, in contrast to
    subdivision (e)(3) and (4), the first two subparts in subdivision
    (e) provide “a bright-line ‘official proceeding’ test”].) This
    provision consequently suggests that courts should engage in a
    relatively careful analysis of whether a particular statement
    falls within the ambit of “other conduct” encompassed by
    subdivision (e)(4).
    It would be all but impossible, as part of such a careful
    analysis, to justify ignoring the ordinary contextual cues
    affecting how people generally evaluate speech. Our courts have
    not ignored such cues. (See San Diegans, supra, 
    13 Cal.App.5th 9
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    at p. 106 [the identity of the actor matters; “[Defendant]
    Inewsource is not a construction company. It is in the news
    reporting business, and the contracts [San Diegans for Open
    Government] challenges shape the way inewsource and KPBS
    gather, produce, and report the news”]; Mendoza v. ADP
    Screening & Selection Services, Inc. (2010) 
    182 Cal.App.4th 1644
    , 1653 (Mendoza) [the audience of the speech (in this case,
    an employer) matters; “We are also swayed by the public
    interest in safe workplaces, and in the liability which may
    attach to employers who fail to investigate prospective
    employees where prudence justifies such an investigation.
    Thus, as a foundational, broad-based proposition, we conclude
    that    providing    employment-screening       reports  is    a
    constitutionally founded, protected activity within the meaning
    of the anti-SLAPP statute”]; All One God Faith, Inc. v. Organic
    & Sustainable Industry Standards, Inc. (2010) 
    183 Cal.App.4th 1186
    , 1204 (All One) [the purpose of the speech matters; “The
    purpose of the ‘ “OASIS Organic” seal’ is to promote the sale of
    the product to which it is affixed, not the standard or its
    elements”].)
    Nor are contextual considerations relevant merely to some
    generalized evaluation implicit in the analysis. In articulating
    what constitutes a matter of public interest, courts look to
    certain specific considerations, such as whether the subject of
    the speech or activity “was a person or entity in the public eye”
    or “could affect large numbers of people beyond the direct
    participants” (Wilbanks v. Wolk (2004) 
    121 Cal.App.4th 883
    , 898
    (Wilbanks)); and whether the activity “occur[red] in the context
    of an ongoing controversy, dispute or discussion” (Du Charme v.
    International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (2003) 
    110 Cal.App.4th 107
    , 119 (Du Charme)), or “affect[ed] a community
    10
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    in a manner similar to that of a governmental entity” (Damon v.
    Ocean Hills Journalism Club (2000) 
    85 Cal.App.4th 468
    , 479).
    The Court of Appeal’s contrary position in this case is not
    supported by the cases on which it relied. Leaning on Terry v.
    Davis Community Church (2005) 
    131 Cal.App.4th 1534
     (Terry)
    and Hecimovich v. Encinal School Parent Teacher
    Organization (2012) 
    203 Cal.App.4th 450
     (Hecimovich), the
    appellate court held that “[n]either the identity of the speaker
    nor the identity of the audience affects the content of the
    communication, or whether that content concerns an issue of
    public interest.” (FilmOn, supra, 13 Cal.App.5th at p. 723.) But
    those two decisions stand only for the proposition that section
    425.16 could apply “to private communications concerning
    issues of public interest.” (Terry, supra, 131 Cal.App.4th at p.
    1546; see also Hecimovich, supra, 203 Cal.App.4th at p. 465
    [“ ‘ “ ‘[T]he focus of the speaker’s conduct should be the public
    interest. . . .’ ” [Citation.] Nevertheless, it may encompass
    activity between private people.’ ”].) Long before Terry and
    Hecimovich, we held that section 425.16 may protect private
    events and conversations. (Navellier v. Sletten (2002) 
    29 Cal.4th 82
    , 91 [“When previously construing the statute, however, we
    have declined to hold ‘that section 425.16 does not apply to
    events that transpire between private individuals’ . . . .” quoting
    Briggs, 
    supra,
     19 Cal. 4th at p. 1116].) But we have never
    suggested quite a different proposition: that it will never matter
    whether the conversations were private or widely broadcasted
    and received, and for what purpose.
    Indeed, those contextual factors mattered in both Terry
    and Hecimovich. In Terry, the court considered that the
    speakers were church leaders attempting to protect children in
    the church’s youth groups, as evidenced by the fact that “the
    11
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    matter was referred to the Davis Police Department for
    investigation.” (Terry, supra, 131 Cal.App.4th at p. 1547; id. at
    p. 1548.)   In Hecimovich, too, the court highlighted the
    relationship between the speech, the speaker, and the audience.
    (Hecimovich, supra, 203 Cal.App.4th at pp. 465–466
    [emphasizing that “communications in issue here concern the
    well-being of young children in an afterschool sports program,
    as discussed between and among members of the PTO, parents
    of the young team members, and league officials”].) The court
    below erred in using these cases to constrain its inquiry to the
    content of DoubleVerify’s speech, deracinated of context.
    B.
    DoubleVerify concedes that section 425.16 invites courts
    to consider the context in which statements were made. But it
    argues that one kind of contextual cue –– commercial
    context — is irrelevant except as specified in a neighboring
    provision, section 425.17, subdivision (c). We disagree.
    Section 425.17, subdivision (c) categorically exempts
    certain expressive actions from the scope of section 425.16. To
    fall within the scope of the exemption, the speaker must be “a
    person primarily engaged in the business of selling or leasing
    goods or services” making “representations of fact about that
    person’s or a business competitor’s business operations, goods,
    or services” to “an actual or potential buyer or customer, or a
    person likely to repeat the statement to, or otherwise influence,
    an actual or potential buyer or customer” with “the purpose of
    obtaining approval for, promoting, or securing sales or leases of,
    or commercial transactions in, the person’s goods or services, or
    the statement or conduct was made in the course of delivering
    12
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    the person’s goods or services.”3 (§ 425.17, subd. (c).) So whether
    section 425.17, subdivision (c) exempts the speech depends not
    only on the content of that speech but also the identity of the
    speaker, the intended audience, and the purpose of the
    statement.
    3
    In its entirety, section 425.17, subdivision (c), states:
    “Section 425.16 does not apply to any cause of action brought
    against a person primarily engaged in the business of selling or
    leasing goods or services, including, but not limited to,
    insurance, securities, or financial instruments, arising from any
    statement or conduct by that person if both of the following
    conditions exist:
    (1) The statement or conduct consists of representations of
    fact about that person’s or a business competitor’s
    business operations, goods, or services, that is made for
    the purpose of obtaining approval for, promoting, or
    securing sales or leases of, or commercial transactions
    in, the person’s goods or services, or the statement or
    conduct was made in the course of delivering the
    person’s goods or services.
    (2) The intended audience is an actual or potential buyer
    or customer, or a person likely to repeat the statement
    to, or otherwise influence, an actual or potential buyer
    or customer, or the statement or conduct arose out of or
    within the context of a regulatory approval process,
    proceeding, or investigation, except where the
    statement or conduct was made by a telephone
    corporation in the course of a proceeding before the
    California Public Utilities Commission and is the
    subject of a lawsuit brought by a competitor,
    notwithstanding that the conduct or statement
    concerns an important public issue.”
    13
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    Notice how the language of section 425.17, subdivision (c)
    and subsequent case law indicate that the provision exempts
    “only a subset of commercial speech” — specifically, comparative
    advertising.4 (All One, supra, 183 Cal.App.4th at p. 1217; see
    Simpson, supra, 49 Cal.4th at pp. 32–33 [quoting Mendoza,
    supra, 182 Cal.App.4th at p. 1652, for the notion that “ ‘the
    Legislature appears to have enacted section 425.17, subdivision
    (c), for the purpose of exempting from the reach of the anti-
    SLAPP statute cases involving comparative advertising by
    businesses’ ”].) So certain commercially oriented statements
    will fall outside the scope of section 425.17, subdivision (c). (All
    One, supra, 183 Cal.App.4th at p. 1217 [“the better
    understanding of section 425.17, subdivision (c), is that all of the
    speech exempted from the anti-SLAPP statute is commercial
    speech, but not all commercial speech is exempted
    thereunder”].) Like all other statements that do not fall within
    the scope of an exemption, such statements are eligible for anti-
    SLAPP protection under section 425.16.5
    4
    The parties agree that DoubleVerify’s reports to its clients
    are not exempted under section 425.17, subdivision (c), because
    DoubleVerify was not making representations about its own
    business but FilmOn’s, and DoubleVerify and FilmOn were not
    competitors. (See Simpson Strong-Tie Co., Inc. v. Gore (2010)
    
    49 Cal.4th 12
    , 32 (Simpson) [finding that § 425.17, subd. (c) did
    not apply when “ ‘the representation was not “about”
    [defendant’s] or a competitor’s services or business
    operations’ ”]; Stewart v. Rolling Stone LLC (2010) 
    181 Cal.App.4th 664
    , 676 (Stewart) [same].)
    5
    We disapprove Rezec v. Sony Pictures Entertainment,
    Inc. (2004) 
    116 Cal.App.4th 135
     to the extent it is inconsistent
    with this opinion.
    14
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    DoubleVerify argues that considering commercial context
    under the catchall provision would “render[] [s]ection 425.17(c)
    redundant and mere surplusage,” because it would involve
    importing the analysis for the exemption into the analysis for
    the catchall provision. But the Legislature’s decision to
    explicitly require consideration of certain contextual
    factors — like speaker, audience, and purpose — in defining the
    comparative advertising exception should not lead us to decide
    these contextual factors are categorically excluded from
    consideration under section 425.16. When the statutory
    language and structure otherwise cut so sharply in favor of
    considering context in applying the anti-SLAPP statute, we
    should not lightly assume that context may be considered only
    under one subdivision merely because that subdivision explicitly
    mentions certain contextual factors.
    Nor does it seem the Legislature contemplated that
    outcome when it added section 425.17, subdivision (c). Instead,
    the relevant legislative history included language observing how
    the exception allowed certain lobbying activities and marketing
    to “be viewed in the context of its offering, just as a speech by a
    person against the building of a waste facility in the
    neighborhood.” (Sen. Judiciary Com., Analysis of Sen. Bill No.
    515 (2003–2004 Reg. Sess.) as amended May 1, 2003, pp. 9–10,
    italics added.) It noted that while the latter “can clearly be seen
    to have been made in the context of exercising the person’s
    constitutional right of speech,” the “content and context of the
    former activities are clearly more in furtherance of business
    considerations.” (Id. at p. 10.)
    We do not, as FilmOn urges, sort statements categorically
    into commercial or noncommercial baskets in analyzing whether
    they are covered by the catchall provision. We merely conclude
    15
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    that the very contextual cues revealing a statement to be
    “commercial” in nature — whether it was private or public, to
    whom it was said, and for what purpose — can bear on whether
    it was made in furtherance of free speech in connection with a
    public issue. (§ 425.16, subd. (e)(4).) In other words, context
    matters under the catchall provision, and commercial context is
    no exception.
    III.
    A.
    So within the framework of section 425.16, subdivision
    (e)(4), a court must consider the context as well the content of a
    statement in determining whether that statement furthers the
    exercise of constitutional speech rights in connection with a
    matter of public interest. Having established this principle, we
    now turn to analyzing how context should feature in a court’s
    analysis under the catchall provision, and to applying that
    framework to the facts of this case.
    Our courts have ably distilled the characteristics of “a
    public issue or an issue of public interest.” (§ 425.16, subd.
    (e)(4); see Rivero v. American Federation of State, County, and
    Municipal Employees, AFL-CIO (2003) 
    105 Cal.App.4th 913
    ,
    919–924 (Rivero) [describing three non-exclusive categories of
    public interest]; Weinberg v. Feisel (2003) 
    110 Cal.App.4th 1122
    ,
    1132–1133 (Weinberg) [describing additional attributes of
    protected        conduct].)             But       they       have
    struggled — understandably — to articulate the requisite nexus
    between the challenged statements and the asserted issue of
    public interest — to give meaning, in other words, to the “in
    connection with” requirement. (§ 425.16, subd. (e)(4).)
    16
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    Most often, courts strive to discern what the challenged
    speech is really “about” — a narrow, largely private dispute, for
    example, or the asserted issue of public interest. (See Bikkina
    v. Mahadevan (2015) 
    241 Cal.App.4th 70
    , 85 [defendant’s speech
    was “about falsified data and plagiarism in two scientific papers,
    not about global warming”]; World Financial Group, Inc. v.
    HBW Ins. & Financial Services, Inc. (2009) 
    172 Cal.App.4th 1561
    , 1572 [defendants’ attempts to solicit competitor’s agents
    and customers were not “about” the public issues of “workforce
    mobility and free competition” or “the pursuit of lawful
    employment”]; Mann v. Quality Old Time Service, Inc. (2004)
    
    120 Cal.App.4th 90
    , 111 [defendants’ statements “were not
    about pollution or potential public health and safety issues in
    general, but about [the plaintiffs’] specific business practices”].)
    This focus on discerning a single topic of speech is less than
    satisfying; if the social media era has taught us anything, it is
    that speech is rarely “about” any single issue.
    The inquiry under the catchall provision instead calls for
    a two-part analysis rooted in the statute’s purpose and internal
    logic. First, we ask what “public issue or [] issue of public
    interest” the speech in question implicates — a question we
    answer by looking to the content of the speech. (§ 425.16, subd.
    (e)(4).) Second, we ask what functional relationship exists
    between the speech and the public conversation about some
    matter of public interest. It is at the latter stage that context
    proves useful.
    The travails of the lower courts demonstrate that virtually
    always, defendants succeed in drawing a line –– however
    tenuous –– connecting their speech to an abstract issue of public
    interest.    (See Consumer Justice Center v. Trimedica
    International, Inc. (2003) 
    107 Cal.App.4th 595
    , 601 [defendants’
    17
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    advertisements of a breast enlargement product were not “about
    the general topic of herbal supplements” but were instead
    “commercial speech about the specific properties and efficacy of
    a particular product”]; Rivero, supra, 105 Cal.App.4th at pp.
    919, 924 [rejecting union’s argument that, in publishing
    statements heralding suspension of a custodial supervisor, it
    was commenting on the abusive supervision of employees
    throughout a publicly financed educational institution].)
    DoubleVerify is no exception.           As it does now,
    DoubleVerify argued before the appellate court that its reports
    “concerned” or “addressed” topics of widespread public interest:
    the presence of adult content on the internet, generally, and the
    presence of copyright-infringing content on FilmOn’s websites,
    specifically. To support its argument that FilmOn’s alleged
    copyright infringement is a matter of public interest,
    DoubleVerify offered evidence that FilmOn has been subject to
    media reports and litigation over its streaming model.6 The
    Court of Appeal agreed, finding that DoubleVerify’s reports
    were made “in connection with” matters of public interest
    because the company’s tags “identif[ied]” content that fell within
    categories of broad public interest.        (FilmOn, supra, 13
    Cal.App.5th at p. 720.)
    But the catchall provision demands “some degree of
    closeness” between the challenged statements and the asserted
    public interest. (Weinberg, supra, 110 Cal.App.4th at p. 1132.)
    6
    We grant DoubleVerify’s requests for judicial notice of
    certain court orders and legislative history materials. (Evid.
    Code, §§ 451–452.) The court orders were entered in cases
    brought against FilmOn for copyright infringement, and the
    legislative history materials are of bills relating to the
    enactment of sections 425.16 and 425.17, subdivision (c).
    18
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    So even if adult content on the Internet and FilmOn’s particular
    streaming model are in fact issues of public interest, we agree
    with the court in Wilbanks that “it is not enough that the
    statement refer to a subject of widespread public interest; the
    statement must in some manner itself contribute to the public
    debate.” (Wilbanks, supra, 121 Cal.App.4th at p. 898; see also
    Dyer v. Childress (2007) 
    147 Cal.App.4th 1273
    , 1280 [“[t]he fact
    that ‘a broad and amorphous public interest’ can be connected
    to a specific dispute” is not enough].)
    What it means to “contribute to the public debate”
    (Wilbanks, supra, 121 Cal.App.4th at p. 898) will perhaps differ
    based on the state of public discourse at a given time, and the
    topic of contention. But ultimately, our inquiry does not turn on
    a normative evaluation of the substance of the speech. We are
    not concerned with the social utility of the speech at issue, or
    the degree to which it propelled the conversation in any
    particular direction; rather, we examine whether a
    defendant — through       public   or     private   speech     or
    conduct — participated in, or furthered, the discourse that
    makes an issue one of public interest. (See All One, supra, 183
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 1203–1204 [finding the “OASIS Organic seal”
    did not “contribute to a broader debate on the meaning of the
    term ‘organic’ ”]; Cross v. Cooper (2011) 
    197 Cal.App.4th 357
    ,
    375 [finding the defendant’s conduct “directly related” to an
    issue of public interest because it “served th[e] interests” of
    preventing child abuse and protecting children].)
    Contrary to DoubleVerify’s arguments, the Wilbanks rule
    adds no additional requirement beyond those already in the
    catchall provision. It is instead a reasonable interpretation of
    the provision’s existing requirement that statements be made
    “in connection with” an issue of public interest — an
    19
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    interpretation informed by the statutory purpose explicitly
    articulated in the preamble to the anti-SLAPP statute. Section
    425.16, subdivision (a) “declares that it is in the public interest
    to encourage continued participation in matters of public
    significance.”   Though we have cautioned that statutory
    preambles do not impose substantive requirements (Briggs,
    supra, 19 Cal.4th at p. 1118), our task when interpreting
    legislation is to effectuate the statutory purpose –– and
    “statements of purpose in a statute’s preamble can be
    illuminating,” particularly if a statute is ambiguous (Yeager v.
    Blue Cross of California (2009) 
    175 Cal.App.4th 1098
    , 1103).
    We adopted the same approach in Briggs, where we
    construed subdivision (e)(1) and (e)(2) of the anti-SLAPP
    statute. (Briggs, 
    supra,
     19 Cal.4th at p. 1118.) We explained in
    Briggs that although the statutory preamble did not impose “an
    across-the-board       ‘issue   of   public   interest’   pleading
    requirement,” we understood the Legislature to equate
    statements made in certain official proceedings with matters of
    “public significance.” (Ibid. [“Any matter pending before an
    official proceeding possesses some measure of ‘public
    significance’ owing solely to the public nature of the proceeding
    . . . .”].) Likewise, here, the preamble’s reference to “continued
    participation” in matters of public significance (§ 425.16, subd.
    (a)) adds no substantive requirement to a defendant’s burden to
    show conduct “in furtherance of” free speech “in connection with
    a public issue or an issue of public interest” (§ 425.16, subd.
    (e)(4)). The two are instead coextensive: a statement is made
    “in connection with” a public issue when it contributes to — that
    is, “participat[es]” in or furthers — some public conversation on
    the issue. But the inquiry of whether a statement contributes
    to the public debate is one a court can hardly undertake without
    20
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    incorporating considerations of context — including audience,
    speaker, and purpose.
    B.
    When it declined to consider the context in which
    DoubleVerify made its statements, the Court of Appeal
    overlooked critical details bearing on the court’s scrutiny of the
    relationship between speech and the matter of public interest
    with which it is assertedly “in connection.” (§ 425.16, subd.
    (e)(4).) We examine those contextual details now, working
    within the two-part framework we just described.
    DoubleVerify has identified the public issues or issues of
    public interest to which its reports and their “tags” relate. It
    argues FilmOn is notorious for its long history of violating
    copyright laws, and “FilmOn’s CEO and billionaire owner, Mr.
    David, regularly injects himself in the public spotlight to discuss
    himself, his companies, and the purported legality of FilmOn’s
    services.”    The Court of Appeal, meanwhile, determined
    DoubleVerify’s report “concerned an issue of public interest”
    because “the presence of adult content on the Internet generally,
    as well as copyright infringing content on FilmOn’s websites
    specifically, has been the subject of numerous press reports,
    regulatory actions, and federal lawsuits.” (FilmOn, supra, 13
    Cal.App.5th at p. 720.) It also concluded DoubleVerify’s reports
    were related to “the public debate over legislation to curb
    children’s exposure to adult and sexually explicit media
    content.” (Ibid.)
    It is true enough that the various actions of a prominent
    CEO, or the issue of children’s exposure to sexually explicit
    media content –– in the abstract –– seem to qualify as issues of
    public interest under subdivision (e)(4). But even assuming so,
    21
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    the focus of our inquiry must be on “the specific nature of the
    speech,” rather than on any “generalities that might be
    abstracted from it.” (Commonwealth Energy Corp. v. Investor
    Data Exchange, Inc. (2003) 
    110 Cal.App.4th 26
    , 34, italics
    omitted.) Defendants cannot merely offer a “synecdoche theory”
    of public interest, defining their narrow dispute by its slight
    reference to the broader public issue. (Ibid.)
    So the second part of the test moves from a focus on
    identifying the relevant matters of public interest to addressing
    the specific nature of defendants’ speech and its relationship to
    the matters of public interest. We cannot answer this second
    question simply by looking at the content of the challenged
    statements –– though no doubt in some cases that content will
    prove illuminating. In this case, that content comprises three
    columns listing various Internet domains and subdomains,
    “[t]otal [impressions]” from viewers, and the thematic
    “[c]ategories” to which each domain belongs, as defined by
    DoubleVerify. That DoubleVerify identifies FilmOn as falling
    within certain categories, however, tells us nothing of how that
    identification relates to the issues of copyright and adult
    content. We can answer that question only by looking at the
    broader context in which DoubleVerify issued its reports,
    discerning through that context whether the company’s conduct
    qualifies for statutory protection by furthering the public
    conversation on an issue of public interest. (See § 425.16,
    subd. (a) [declaring it is “in the public interest to encourage
    continued participation in matters of public significance”];
    Wilbanks, supra, 121 Cal.App.4th at p. 898 [explaining that
    conduct must “contribute to the public debate” to warrant
    protection under the catchall provision].)
    22
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    It seems plain enough that DoubleVerify’s reports did no
    such thing. DoubleVerify issues its reports not to the wider
    public — who may well be interested in whether FilmOn hosts
    content unsuitable for children or whether its streaming
    platform infringes copyright — but privately, to a coterie of
    paying clients. Those clients, in turn, use the information
    DoubleVerify provides for their business purposes alone. The
    information never entered the public sphere, and the parties
    never intended it to.
    Yet no single element is dispositive — not DoubleVerify’s
    for-profit status, or the confidentiality of the reports, or the use
    to which its clients put its reports. Nor does the combination of
    these contextual factors create a “commercial speech” category
    onto which we automatically map the presence or absence of
    anti-SLAPP protections. Some commercially oriented speech
    will, in fact, merit anti-SLAPP protection.
    Consider, for example, Industrial Waste & Debris Box
    Service, Inc. v. Murphy (2016) 
    4 Cal.App.5th 1135
    , 1148
    (Industrial Waste), in which the appellate court found that a for-
    profit consultant’s report fell within the ambit of the catchall
    provision. “Commercial” though that report may have been, it
    analyzed public reports, landfill records, and state agency data
    to conclude a client’s competitor — the plaintiff waste
    hauler — had overcalculated and misreported the rate at which
    it diverted waste for reuse, recycling, and composting. (Id. at p.
    1143.) Following a rough approximation of the two-part
    framework we outline here, the court decided first that “limited
    landfill capacity and the environmental effects of waste
    disposal” are indeed issues of “significant interest” to the public
    and municipal governments; and second, that the report “shed
    light on these subjects” — that is, contributed to the issue of
    23
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    public interest — by deriving data from public reports and
    commenting on “whether and to what degree waste hauling
    companies in Sonoma County were meeting government
    standards.” (Id. at pp. 1148–1149.) These findings, in turn,
    prompted the sanitation board to alter its contracts and policies.
    (Id. at p. 1144.)
    It is in the extent of its contribution to, or participation in,
    the public discussion that DoubleVerify’s report diverges from
    the report at issue in Industrial Waste. As the court in that case
    aptly noted, “[w]hether speech has a commercial or promotional
    aspect is not dispositive” of whether it is made in connection
    with an issue of public interest. (Id. at p. 1150.) After all, the
    anti-SLAPP statute protects more than those activities “ ‘which
    meet the lofty standard of pertaining to the heart of self-
    government.’ ” (Briggs, supra, 19 Cal.4th at p. 1116, quoting
    Braun v. Chronicle Publishing Co. (1997) 
    52 Cal.App.4th 1036
    ,
    1046–1047.) But nothing in the statute or our precedent elides
    the potential relevance of that commercial character in deciding
    whether speech merits protection under the catchall provision.
    Instead, a court must consider whether a statement — including
    the identity of its speaker, for example, or the audience
    sought — contributes to or furthers the public conversation on
    an issue of public interest. It is by carefully observing this
    wedding of content and context that we can discern if conduct is
    “in furtherance of” free speech “in connection with” a public
    issue or issue of public interest. (§ 425.16, subd. (e)(4).) What
    this union of content and context lets us discern in this case is
    that DoubleVerify’s report does not qualify for protection under
    the catchall provision of the anti-SLAPP statute.
    24
    FILMON.COM INC. v. DOUBLEVERIFY INC.
    Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.
    IV.
    The scenario before us involves two well-funded for-profit
    entities engaged in a private dispute over one’s
    characterization –– in a confidential report –– of the other’s
    business practices. Because our “primary goal is to determine
    and give effect to the underlying purpose of” the anti-SLAPP
    statute (Goodman v. Lozano (2010) 
    47 Cal.4th 1327
    , 1332), this
    context matters. It allows courts to liberally extend the
    protection of the anti-SLAPP statute where doing so would
    “encourage continued participation in matters of public
    significance,” but withhold that protection otherwise. (§ 425.16,
    subd. (a).) And here, it allows us to discern what content alone
    conveys less clearly: DoubleVerify did not issue its report in
    furtherance of free speech “in connection with” an issue of public
    interest. (§ 425.16, subd. (e)(4).)
    Because the Court of Appeal held to the contrary, we
    reverse.
    CUÉLLAR, J.
    We Concur:
    CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.
    CHIN, J.
    CORRIGAN, J.
    LIU, J.
    KRUGER, J.
    GROBAN, J.
    25
    See next page for addresses and telephone numbers for counsel who argued in Supreme Court.
    Name of Opinion FilmOn.com v. DoubleVerify, Inc.
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Unpublished Opinion
    Original Appeal
    Original Proceeding
    Review Granted XXX 
    13 Cal.App.5th 707
    Rehearing Granted
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Opinion No. S244157
    Date Filed: May 6, 2019
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Court: Superior
    County: Los Angeles
    Judge: Terry A. Green
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Counsel:
    Baker Marquart, Ryan G. Baker, Scott M. Malzahn, Jaime W. Marquart, Christian A. Anstett and Blake D.
    McCay for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Fox Rothschild, Lincoln D. Bandlow, Margo J. Arnold and Rom Bar-Nissam for Defendant and
    Respondent.
    Davis Wright Tremaine, Kelli L. Sager, Rochelle L. Wilcox and Thomas R. Burke for Motion Picture
    Association of America, Inc., The Hearst Corporation, Tegna Inc., California News Publishers Association
    and First Amendment Coalition as Amici Curiae on behalf of Defendant and Respondent.
    Counsel who argued in Supreme Court (not intended for publication with opinion):
    Ryan G. Baker
    Baker Marquart
    777 S. Figueroa Street, Suite 2850
    Los Angeles, CA 90071
    (424) 652-7800
    Lincoln D. Bandlow
    Fox Rothschild
    10250 Constellation Boulevard, Suite 900
    Los Angeles, CA 90067
    (310) 598-4150
    Rochelle L. Wilcox
    Davis Wright Tremaine
    865 S. Figueroa Street, Suite 2400
    Los Angeles, CA 90017-2566
    (213) 633-6800