San Francisco: Google won a jury verdict that kills Oracle’s claim to a $9 billion slice of the search giant’s Android phone business and may give comfort to programmers who write applications that run across different platforms without a licence.
Oracle contended that Google needed a licence to use its Java programming language to develop Android, the operating system in 80 per cent of the world’s mobile devices. Jurors in San Francisco federal court on Thursday rejected that argument and concluded Google made fair use of the code under copyright law.
Oracle started the second trial in a case spanning almost six years at an advantage, with the judge explaining that it had already been established that Google had infringed Oracle’s copyrights. Oracle plans to appeal the verdict, while legal experts say overturning it will be difficult.
The verdict should provide reassurance to software companies that their method of creating common, interoperable software doesn’t put them in legal jeopardy. Instead, it will promote the practice of writing re-implementations of the systems used to pass information between widely-used software.
The tens of thousands of software developers who use application programming interfaces — the shortcuts that allow developers to write programs to work across software platforms that were at the heart of the lawsuit — will celebrate this outcome, according to Al Hilwa, an analyst with IDC. Google’s victory frees them of a key concern as they build everything from games to enterprise applications, he said.
‘Sigh of relief’
"A lot of people have sort of breathed a sigh of relief,” he said.
A federal appeals court’s 2014 ruling that the Java APIs are eligible for copyright protection may still have a "chilling effect” on software companies, because few have the resources to mount a defense as vigorous as Google did, said Tyler Ochoa, a professor at Santa Clara University School of Law who has followed the case closely since it was filed in 2010.
Still, the "ruling should encourage some of those companies that what they are doing is fair, and that they will ultimately prevail if sued for copyright infringement,” he said.
Google relied on witnesses including former Chief Executive Officer Eric Schmidt, who is now chairman of parent company Alphabet, to convince jurors that it used Java to innovate, rather than merely copy code. Before joining Google, Schmidt worked at Sun Microsystems developing and marketing Java. Oracle acquired Sun in 2010 and Schmidt was involved in Google’s failed licensing negotiations that spurred the copyright-infringement lawsuit filed that year by the database maker.
‘Free and open’
Schmidt told jurors that, based on his "many years of experience” with Java, he believed Google was permitted to use the APIs without a negotiated license, as long as the company relied on its own code. Sun promoted them as "free and open,” and not sold or licensed separately from Java, he said.
Central to Oracle’s bid for what would have been one of the largest jury verdicts in US history was its claim that Google has reaped $21 billion in profit from more than 3 billion activations of Android. Oracle sought damages of $8.8 billion, plus $475 million in what it claims was lost licensing revenue.
Oracle said it plans to seek review of the verdict by the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington, the same court that ruled in its favor in 2014.
"We strongly believe that Google developed Android by illegally copying core Java technology to rush into the mobile device market,” Oracle General Counsel Dorian Daley said in a statement. "Oracle brought this lawsuit to put a stop to Google’s illegal behaviour. We believe there are numerous grounds for appeal.”
Google relied on a "free-market” argument, Ochoa said.
Google claimed it was within its rights to use the organisation and labeling of the Java code to develop Android because programmers were already familiar with them, Ochoa said. Google’s message was that "Oracle shouldn’t ‘own’ programmers simply because they had taken the time to learn Java,” Ochoa said.
Ochoa was one of 41 academics who agreed with Google that the code at issue didn’t merit copyright protection and urged the US Supreme Court to review the case. The high court last year declined to take it.
Android ecosystem
"Today’s verdict that Android makes fair use of Java APIs represents a win for the Android ecosystem, for the Java programming community, and for software developers who rely on open and free programming languages to build innovative consumer products,” Google said in an e-mailed statement.
Of the eight women and two men on the jury, four declined to comment and the rest left the courtroom quickly after Thursday’s verdict. The forewoman of the panel was a lawyer who works for the county government in Napa, California.
In the first trial in 2012, jurors found Google infringed Oracle’s copyrights but couldn’t agree whether it was justified under the fair use legal doctrine. That set the stage for the second trial, featuring many of the witnesses from four years ago as well as the same judge, William Alsup.
Both sides leaned on powerful Silicon Valley personalities to put a shine on technology-laden arguments.
Ten Commandments
Oracle Co-Chief Executive Officer Safra Catz invoked the Ten Commandments to characterise Google as acting above the law. Catz told jurors that, at a bat mitzvah in 2012, Google General Counsel Kent Walker told her, "You know, Safra, Google is this really special company, and the old rules don’t apply to us.”
"I immediately said, ‘Thou shalt not steal,’” Catz testified. "It’s an oldie but goodie.”
Witnesses for Google said the company didn’t need a license for the Java’s APIs to build Android.
In cross-examinations of those witnesses, Oracle’s lawyers hit upon a disconnect between their testimony and selected e-mails while Android was being created. The messages showed Google executives and engineers were concerned that they needed, and didn’t get, a license for Java.
‘Making enemies’
Google co-founder Larry Page was confronted with a 2005 internal e-mail posing the question of whether to drop the use of Java for Android or press ahead, "perhaps making enemies along the way.”
Page responded, "Obviously we didn’t do the first one.”
Ochoa and Michael Risch, a law professor at Villanova University School of Law in Pennsylvania who’s been following the case, said it will be difficult for Oracle to overturn the jury verdict because an appeals court will have to conclude the instructions to jurors on the legal issues in the case were flawed. — Bloomberg News