https://archive.org/details/LegalGeekEp76
Almost two weeks ago, Google had two big court decisions be handed down by juries in Delaware and in California on consecutive days.
The first was a patent infringement lawsuit in Delaware in which the jury found that Google's mapping technology used in the Google Earth application did not infringe a patent from the mid-90s from a German company that had developed a similar program called Terravision back then. Moreover, the jury found that the patent was invalid as well.
The claims in the patent at issue were all about how image resolution is handled when zooming in from a larger satellite image to a more detailed view of a specific area. Google was able to handle image resolution in a different manner that the jury determined was outside what the patent covered.
With the patent due to expire in 2016 anyway, this type of technology is becoming open to public use by other developers regardless of the invalidity decision. So while this is a big multi-million dollar win for Google and users of Google Earth, it pales in comparison to the other case decided in favor of Google.
That case in California was the latest in a long battle between Oracle and Google over whether Google's use of several elements of application programming interfaces or APIs from the Java programming language when making the mobile platform for Android was copyright infringement. Oracle sought damages of up to $8.8 billion dollars for Google's use of the pre-written computing instructions Oracle created to help programmers more easily write in Java!
This round of the long legal fight was limited to the question of whether Google's use of the APIs was protected as fair use. Any recent follower of this segment knows that this is the hotbed area of development in copyright law in the U.S., with more and more things becoming deemed fair use rather than copyright infringement.
Although fair use is a complicated test based on the facts, the jury here appears to have decided in favor of Google and fair use based on only a small amount of material being copied from Oracle's code and Google's transformative use of that code to make something new, a mobile phone platform.
This case could potentially have much bigger impact on the fair use doctrine because Oracle is going to appeal this to the Federal Circuit and to the Supreme Court, if necessary. This is precisely the type of case between two powerhouse companies and legal teams that could set the table for a big shift in the definition of fair use. Which would change copyright law and infringement forever. So stay tuned.
The Bottom Line is, Google's big wins are obviously good for them and users of these techs in the short term, but that copyright case could become one of the biggest in IP law history if it changes fair use rules and standards.
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Temporary Closer: Thanks for listening. If you enjoy this segment and will be coming to Origins Game Fair in Columbus Ohio in June, please message me on Twitter @BuckeyeFitzy and we can meet up. I'm also giving two seminars about game design and the law, feel free to check them out.
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Thanks for reading. Please provide feedback and legal-themed questions as segment suggestions to me on Twitter @BuckeyeFitzy
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