Thursday, May 31, 2012

Copyright Infringement


Copyright Infringement
Google has been found liable for copyright infringement for its use of the Java in Android but it hasn’t been decided if it was “fair use.” The verdict that was delivered was a partial victory for Oracle but they will have to wait longer to see whether Google will get out of liability with its claim of fair use.  When the verdict was delivered the next step was the patents phase of the case, and the case had three parts to it. First is to address copyrights, then the patents and lastly the any damages Oracle should receive. Technically APIs (application programming interfaces) have not been considered copyrightable. But Oracle argues that the set up is merit to protection. Oracle was happy with the verdict. “The overwhelming evidence demonstrated that Google knew it needed a license and that its unauthorized fork of Java in Android shatters Java’s central write once run anywhere principle,” it said. One industry analyst was troubled by the jury's decision. "I was a bit disappointed by the verdict, as I think that the precedent of copyright for APIs opens up a real can of worms and potentially stifles software innovation," Forrester analyst Jeffrey Hammond said via email. Google did prevail on some other issues, including whether it infringed a copyright for Oracle's Java API documentation. The jury also ruled in Google's favor in two out of three instances where it was accused of copying a small amount of code line-by-line from Java. Fair use allows the copying of creative works for certain limited purposes, such as teaching, commentary and satire. The jury in this case considered factors such as whether Android was "transformative," meaning did it amount to a new creation or was it simply derivative from the Java APIs. They also considered how much of the work as a whole was copied; whether the use was commercial; and how much harm Oracle suffered as a result. I don’t agree with the verdict because if they didn’t make APIs copyrightable before then why is Google liable for using Java in Android.





No comments:

Post a Comment