If
you thought the Oracle v. Google saga was over at last, we have some bad news for
you. On Tuesday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit breathed new
life into the case, ruling that Google violated copyright law when it used
Oracle’s Java APIs to create the Android mobile operating system.
You can read
the full ruling here.
The
case revolves around a central question: Is a programming language like Java
covered by copyright protection? The advent of a third Oracle
v. Google trial
demonstrates that the far-reaching copyright debate is far from over.
Google has maintained
that its use of Java fell under fair use, an argument that a jury agreed
with in 2016. Google also won the first round, when Oracle sued the company in
2010.
Oracle was previously seeking $9 billion in damages, making the financial
stakes just as massive as the implications for the broader software development
world.
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