The U.S. Supreme Court has denied a request from Google to
hear a case in which it was accused of infringing Oracle copyrights by
using Java in its Android mobile operating system.
In a huge victory for Oracle, the Supreme Court on Monday
declined to hear Google's appeal of a May 2014 ruling by the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. In that decision, the appeals court
ruled that Java APIs used by Google were covered by copyright. The
Supreme Court decision opens the door for Oracle, which purchased Java
developer Sun Microsystems in 2010, to charge licensing fees for Java in
Android.
But before that happens, the case goes back to a district
court to decide questions about whether Google had a fair use exemption
to copyright law for Java in Android.
Google, while developing Android in the mid-2000s, wrote its
own version of Java, but its version used some of the same
functionality of Sun's Java APIs. Google's use of Java was originally
welcomed by Sun, but the two companies couldn't come to agreement on a
possible partnership and licensing deal.
Oracle
General Counsel Dorian Daley, in a statement, called the Supreme Court
decision a "win for innovation and for the technology industry that
relies on copyright protection to fuel innovation."
A Google spokesman, in an email, said the company will
"continue to defend the interoperability that has fostered innovation
and competition in the software industry."
Public Knowledge, a digital rights group, said it was
disappointed with the decision. But Federal Circuit's decision
"explicitly left open the possibility that the kinds of uses Google made
were permissible under copyright's fair use doctrine," Charles Duan,
director of Public Knowledge's Patent Reform Project, said by email.
Other courts have come to different conclusions about the
ability to copyright programming interfaces, Duan added. The Federal
Circuit's impact on future cases is "sharply limited," he added.
The long-running case dates back to August 2010, when Oracle
sued Google for copyright and patent infringement. Oracle had attempted
to sign a Java licensing deal with Google, but the two sides didn't
reach an agreement.
In May 2012, a
jury in a district court
in San Francisco found that Google's Android operating system did not
infringe Oracle's Java patents. The following month, Oracle agreed to
accept zero damages for outstanding copyright infringement claims.
The appeals court then partially overturned the district court decision.
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