Google guilty of infringement in Oracle trial; future legal
headaches loom
Future Android litigation may get more costly for Google.
May 7, 2012
by Joe Mullin – ARS Technica
In what could be a major blow to Android, Google's mobile
operating system, a San Francisco jury issued a verdict today
that the company broke copyright laws when it used Java APIs to
design the system. The ruling is a partial victory for Oracle,
which accused Google of violating copyright law.
But the jury couldn't reach agreement on a second
issue—whether Google had a valid "fair use"
defense when it used the APIs. Google has asked for a mistrial
based on the incomplete verdict, and that issue will be briefed
later this week.
The results aren't clear going forward. Both sides are
going to write briefs arguing how to proceed from here, with
Google likely arguing the verdict needs to be thrown out, while
Oracle somehow tries to hang on to its win on question 1A, the
fundamental question about whether Google infringed
copyright.
This article can be found in its entirety on the ARS Technica
website.