Google v Oracle: bad news for API developers
06-04-2021
10-01-2017
By leaning on unusual analogies the US Supreme Court has created unsettling precedents for software developers, argues Bill Frankel of Brinks Gilson & Lione.
In a 6-2 decision, with Justice Stephen Breyer authoring the majority opinion, the Supreme Court has reversed the Federal Circuit’s decision and found that Google’s use of 11,500 lines of the Java SE Application Programming Interface (API) to tailor its Android platform to smartphone technology was fair use under copyright law.
As a consequence of this protracted litigation, the Supreme Court was presented with two principal issues: 1) whether the Java SE declaring code at issue was copyrightable; and 2) whether Google’s taking of the code constituted a “fair use” freeing Google of copyright infringement liability.
U S Supreme Court April opinions
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AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT: Gaming-GPU kann im Test nicht überzeugen
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FOLSOM, Calif., March 15, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Mental health technology startup Opeeka announced this week the release of their Person-Centered Intelligence Solution (P-CIS) to help remove technology barriers from the system of care to support collaboration and coordination of care for multi-system served children/youth and families.
P-CIS is the first platform of its kind to effectively map progress toward well-being for people participating in person-centered care systems.
Opeeka s P-CIS is a HIPAA compliant, multi-agency solution that allows care agencies to coordinate outcomes over time, from an initial screen to post-care satisfaction surveys. Assessments are at the heart of every care system, helping to identify eligibility, level of care, rate of reimbursement, cultural preferences, level of need, areas of strength, functioning, past experiences, diagnosis, progress, satisfaction and final outcomes. P-CIS converts any type of quest