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Google LLC v. Oracle America, Inc., 593 U.S. 1 (2021), [1] was a U.S. Supreme Court decision related to the nature of computer code and copyright law.
Google LLC v. Oracle America, Inc. is a dispute related to Oracle's copyright and patent claims on Google's Android operating system specifically in context of the application programming interfaces (APIs) from the Java implementation that Google had initially used in
Case name Docket no. Date decided Google LLC v. Oracle America, Inc. 18–956: April 5, 2021 Tandon v. Newsom: 20A151: April 9, 2021 AMG Capital Management, LLC v.
The Supreme Court ruled that Google’s use of 11,500 lines of code from Oracle software programming language was a “fair use,” a decision that may have implications for how copyrighted ...
The Supreme Court on Monday sided with Google in a $9 billion copyright fight against Oracle over software in billions of Android phones, in a ruling hailed as “a fantastic win” for smaller ...
Google urged the high court to rule its copying of Oracle's Java programming language to create the Android operating system was permissible under U.S. copyright law. A jury cleared Google in 2016 ...
In 2018, Oracle America Inc v. Google LLC was adjudicated by the United States Federal Circuit Court of Appeals. The case concerned Google's fair use of source code licensed by Oracle under the GNU GPL Version 2. Google had copied 37 Application Programming Interface packages (APIs) to aid in building its free Android software for smartphones ...
The court should say no — free and open APIs protect innovation, competition and job mobility for software developers in America. Standing by developers through Google v. Oracle