Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 7th May 2012 20:09 UTC
Legal There's some movement in the Oracle-Google lawsuit today, but it's rather difficult to determine just what kind of movement. The jury was told by the judge Alsup to assume APIs are copyrightable - something Alsup still has to determine later during trial - and with that in mind, the judge ruled Google violated Oracle's copyright on Java. However, the jury did not come to an agreement on a rather crucial question: whether or not it was fair use. All in all, a rather meaningless verdict at this point, since it's incomplete. Also, what kind of nonsense is it for a judge to tell a jury to assume something is illegal? Am I the only one who thinks that's just complete insanity?
Permalink for comment 517299
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
Comment by smashIt
by smashIt on Mon 7th May 2012 22:48 UTC
smashIt
Member since:
2005-07-06

The jury was told by the judge Alsup to assume APIs are copyrightable - something Alsup still has to determine later during trial


thats interesting
i thought interoperability-related stuff (and imo APIs are exactly that) is one of the special-cases where even the dmca doesn't apply

Reply Score: 4