Article 4V6RD Supreme Court agrees to review disastrous ruling on API copyrights

Supreme Court agrees to review disastrous ruling on API copyrights

by
Timothy B. Lee
from Ars Technica - All content on (#4V6RD)
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Enlarge / Signage stands at the Oracle Corp. headquarters campus in Redwood City, California, on March 14, 2016. (credit: Michael Short/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The Supreme Court has agreed to review one of the decade's most significant software copyright decisions: last year's ruling by an appeals court that Google infringed Oracle's copyrights when Google created an independent implementation of the Java programming language.

The 2018 ruling by the Federal Circuit appeals court "will upend the longstanding expectation of software developers that they are free to use existing software interfaces to build new computer programs," Google wrote in its January petition to the Supreme Court.

The stakes are high both for Google and for the larger software industry. Until recently, it was widely assumed that copyright law didn't control the use of application programming interfaces (APIs)-standard function calls that allow third parties to build software compatible with an established platform like Java.

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